• Crit Care Resusc · Sep 2020

    A pilot study of high frequency accelerometry-based sedation and agitation monitoring in critically ill patients.

    • Mark Weeden, Nandakishor Desai, Shyamala Sriram, Marimuthu Swami Palaniswami, Bo Wang, Lachlan Talbot, Adam Deane, Rinaldo Bellomo, and Bernard Yan.
    • Department of Intensive Care, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Melbourne, VIC, Australia. weeden.mark.c@gmail.com.
    • Crit Care Resusc. 2020 Sep 1; 22 (3): 245252245-252.

    ObjectiveThe degree of sedation or agitation in critically ill patients is typically assessed with the Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale (RASS). However, this approach is intermittent and subject to unrecognised variation between assessments. High frequency accelerometry may assist in achieving a quantitative and continuous assessment of sedation while heralding imminent agitation.DesignWe undertook a prospective, observational pilot study.SettingAn adult tertiary intensive care unit in Melbourne, Australia.Participants20 patients with an admission diagnosis of trauma.Main Outcome MeasuresAccelerometers were applied to patients' wrists and used to continuously record patient movement. Video data of patient behaviour were simultaneously collected, and observers blinded to accelerometry data were adjudicated the RASS score every 30 seconds. Exploratory analyses were undertaken.ResultsPatients were enrolled for a median duration of 9.7 hours (interquartile range [IQR], 0-22.8) and a total of 160 hours. These patients had a median RASS score of 0 (IQR, -4 to 0). A 2-minute moving window of amplitude variance was seen to reflect contemporaneous fluctuations in motor activity and was proportional to the RASS score. Furthermore, the moving window of amplitude variance was observed to spike immediately before ≥ 2 point increases in the RASS score.ConclusionsWe describe a novel approach to the analysis of wrist accelerometry data in critically ill patients. This technique not only appears to provide novel and continuous information about the depth of sedation or degree of agitation, it is also notable in its aptitude to anticipate impending transitions to higher RASS values.

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