Seminars in respiratory and critical care medicine
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Semin Respir Crit Care Med · Jan 2001
Monitoring sedation, agitation, analgesia, neuromuscular blockade, and delirium in adult ICU patients.
Preliminary evidence suggests that closely monitoring sedation may have a positive effect on patient outcomes, including reductions in intensive care unit (ICU) stay, duration of mechanical ventilatory support, and number of diagnostic tests requested to assess central nervous system function. In the last few years, subjective instruments to assess agitation and sedation have been developed and tested for reliability and validity, including the Sedation-Agitation Scale and the Motor Activity Assessment Scale. ⋯ Promising techniques for objective assessment of sedation (such as the bispectral index) and strategies to guide neuromuscular blockade with train-of-four (TOF) or clinical exam monitoring have emerged. Future efforts should focus on evaluating the impact of these monitoring techniques on specific outcomes in an effort to improve patient comfort, minimize adverse events, and reduce resource consumption.
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Neuromuscular blocking agents (NMBA) are frequently utilized in the ICU, primarily to facilitate mechanical ventilation. An ideal NMBA is nondepolarizing, has no propensity to accumulate, is easily titrated, has a rapid onset and offset, does not rely on organ function for metabolism, and has no toxic or active metabolites. Current NMBAs are classified as aminosteroids or benzylisoquinoliniums and have different features, but none are ideal. ⋯ There are well-recognized complications of NMBA, including prolonged drug effect and acute quadriplegic myopathy. The latter condition can result in prolonged rehabilitation. The use of an NMBA can be essential for the successful outcome from critical illness; however, cautious use of these agents with a structured approach to minimize complications is urged.
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Semin Respir Crit Care Med · Jan 2001
Delirium in the intensive care unit: an under-recognized syndrome of organ dysfunction.
The intensivist should think of delirium, or acute central nervous system dysfunction, as the brain's form of "organ dysfunction.'' Delirium is extremely common in intensive care unit (ICU) patients due to factors such as comorbidity, critical illness, and iatrogenesis. This complication of hospital stay is extremely hazardous in older persons and is associated with prolonged hospital stays, institutionalization, and death. ⋯ More importantly, there are few studies that have included ICU patients in the assessment or prevention of delirium. This article reviews the definition and salient features of delirium, its primary risk factors, a newly validated instrument for delirium assessment that is being developed for ICU nurses and physicians, and pharmacological agents associated with the development of delirium and used in its management.