Critical care clinics
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Intensive care subjects the critically ill patient to a multitude of stressors caused by the severity of illness and the use of invasive treatment modalities and medications. The ICU environment contributes significant stress of its own related to noise, light, 24-hour patient care, and other factors that disturb sleep. ⋯ Some sleep disorder symptomatology may be confused with serious neurologic complications of critical illness and lead to inappropriate testing or treatment, particularly in the patient who has narcolepsy. Given the high prevalence of sleep disorders in the general population, it is essential that the ICU practitioner attain an adequate knowledge of sleep and its disorders.
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The hospital is not conducive to sleep. Patients in the ICU are particularly susceptible to sleep disruption secondary to environmental and medical issues. Despite the frequency of sleep disruption in the ICU, the quality of critically ill patients' sleep is often overlooked. This article discusses the following issues essential to understanding the factors associated with sleep loss in the ICU: (1) core elements to consider from the baseline sleep history, (2) impact of the ICU environment on the ICU patient's sleep pattern, and (3) overall systematic impact of sleep deprivation on the ICU patient.
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Critical care clinics · Jul 2008
Common sleep problems in ICU: heart failure and sleep-disordered breathing syndromes.
Ventilation during sleep is under tight metabolic control, and can be destabilized by upper airway obstruction leading to snoring or obstructive apneas, inadequate respiratory pump muscle activity leading to hypoventilation, and central control instability leading to changes in metabolic feedback and loop gain. These three physiologic disturbances can lead to obstructive sleep apnea hypopnea syndrome (OSAHS), hypoventilation syndromes, and periodic breathing. OSAHS places a strain on the cardiac output by virtue of hypoxemia, large negative intrathoracic pressures, and high swings in systemic blood pressure. Periodic breathing, also known as central sleep apnea with Cheyne-Stokes pattern of respiration, is likely to be a product of advanced heart failure.
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Achieving restorative sleep in the ICU remains a challenge for most patients. Various environmental and nonenvironmental factors affect sleep patterns in the ICU. This article discusses the effects and relative importance of these factors on sleep patterns in the critical care setting. In addition, the implications of sleep pattern alteration on human physiology and homeostatic mechanisms are considered.