scholarly journals Long-Term Cognitive Impairment After Critical Illness

This case focuses on long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness by asking the question: What is the prevalence of long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness, and does the duration of delirium and use of sedative or analgesic medications affect cognitive outcomes? This study demonstrated that 74% of adult patients with critical illness experience delirium during their hospital course. Furthermore, patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting commonly experience global cognition and executive function deficits at 3 and 12 months following hospitalization. These findings highlight the importance of careful delirium surveillance in ICU patients.

Author(s):  
Maria Carlo Duggan ◽  
Kwame Frimpong ◽  
E. Wesley Ely

Older adults constitute the majority of intensive care unit (ICU) patients, and are increasing in both absolute and relative numbers. Critical care for elderly people should be tailored to their unique physiology, susceptibilities to complications, social circumstances, values, and goals for their care. Knowledge of the short and long-term outcomes of critical illness should guide therapy and goals of care. With a growing number of elderly ICU survivors, the functional, cognitive, and psychological consequences of critical illness and ICU exposure will become a more prominent problem to address. In this chapter, we will discuss morbidity and mortality of elderly ICU patients, provide an evidence-based bundle for the management of pain, agitation, and delirium that has been developed with the vulnerabilities of older patients in mind (though it is also being applied broadly to younger patients as well), and explore the long-term physical, cognitive, and psychological consequences that ICU survivors face.


Critical Care ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 18 (3) ◽  
pp. R125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Annemiek E Wolters ◽  
Diederik van Dijk ◽  
Wietze Pasma ◽  
Olaf L Cremer ◽  
Marjolein F Looije ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (6) ◽  
pp. 664-669 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christopher A. Guidry ◽  
Tjasa Hranjec ◽  
Puja M. Shah ◽  
Zachary C. Dietch ◽  
Taryn E. Hassinger ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 43 ◽  
pp. 148-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ivo W. Soliman ◽  
Olaf L. Cremer ◽  
Dylan W. de Lange ◽  
Arjen J.C. Slooter ◽  
Johannes (Hans) J.M. van Delden ◽  
...  

Diagnostics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (11) ◽  
pp. 966
Author(s):  
Humberto D.J. Gonzalez Marrero ◽  
Erik V. Stålberg ◽  
Gerald Cooray ◽  
Rebeca Corpeno Kalamgi ◽  
Yvette Hedström ◽  
...  

Introduction. The acquired muscle paralysis associated with modern critical care can be of neurogenic or myogenic origin, yet the distinction between these origins is hampered by the precision of current diagnostic methods. This has resulted in the pooling of all acquired muscle paralyses, independent of their origin, into the term Intensive Care Unit Acquired Muscle Weakness (ICUAW). This is unfortunate since the acquired neuropathy (critical illness polyneuropathy, CIP) has a slower recovery than the myopathy (critical illness myopathy, CIM); therapies need to target underlying mechanisms and every patient deserves as accurate a diagnosis as possible. This study aims at evaluating different diagnostic methods in the diagnosis of CIP and CIM in critically ill, immobilized and mechanically ventilated intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Methods. ICU patients with acquired quadriplegia in response to critical care were included in the study. A total of 142 patients were examined with routine electrophysiological methods, together with biochemical analyses of myosin:actin (M:A) ratios of muscle biopsies. In addition, comparisons of evoked electromyographic (EMG) responses in direct vs. indirect muscle stimulation and histopathological analyses of muscle biopsies were performed in a subset of the patients. Results. ICU patients with quadriplegia were stratified into five groups based on the hallmark of CIM, i.e., preferential myosin loss (myosin:actin ratio, M:A) and classified as severe (M:A < 0.5; n = 12), moderate (0.5 ≤ M:A < 1; n = 40), mildly moderate (1 ≤ M:A < 1.5; n = 49), mild (1.5 ≤ M:A < 1.7; n = 24) and normal (1.7 ≤ M:A; n = 19). Identical M:A ratios were obtained in the small (4–15 mg) muscle samples, using a disposable semiautomatic microbiopsy needle instrument, and the larger (>80 mg) samples, obtained with a conchotome instrument. Compound muscle action potential (CMAP) duration was increased and amplitude decreased in patients with preferential myosin loss, but deviations from this relationship were observed in numerous patients, resulting in only weak correlations between CMAP properties and M:A. Advanced electrophysiological methods measuring refractoriness and comparing CMAP amplitude after indirect nerve vs. direct muscle stimulation are time consuming and did not increase precision compared with conventional electrophysiological measurements in the diagnosis of CIM. Low CMAP amplitude upon indirect vs. direct stimulation strongly suggest a neurogenic lesion, i.e., CIP, but this was rarely observed among the patients in this study. Histopathological diagnosis of CIM/CIP based on enzyme histochemical mATPase stainings were hampered by poor quantitative precision of myosin loss and the impact of pathological findings unrelated to acute quadriplegia. Conclusion. Conventional electrophysiological methods are valuable in identifying the peripheral origin of quadriplegia in ICU patients, but do not reliably separate between neurogenic vs. myogenic origins of paralysis. The hallmark of CIM, preferential myosin loss, can be reliably evaluated in the small samples obtained with the microbiopsy instrument. The major advantage of this method is that it is less invasive than conventional muscle biopsies, reducing the risk of bleeding in ICU patients, who are frequently receiving anticoagulant treatment, and it can be repeated multiple times during follow up for monitoring purposes.


2021 ◽  
pp. 106002802110168
Author(s):  
Niki M. Krancevich ◽  
Julie J. Belfer ◽  
Heather M. Draper ◽  
Kyle J. Schmidt

Background Opioids are a mainstay of therapy for patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) as part of the analgesia-first approach to sedation. Despite knowledge of acute consequences of opioid based analgosedation, less is known about the potential long-term consequences, including the effect of opioid administration in the ICU on subsequent opioid use in opioid-naïve patients. Objective To evaluate the relationship between ICU opioid administration to opioid-naïve patients and subsequent opioid use following discharge. Methods A query of the electronic medical record was performed to identify opioid-naïve adult patients admitted directly to an ICU. Patients who received continuous intravenous infusion of fentanyl, hydromorphone, or morphine were screened for inclusion into the analysis. Results Of the 342 patients included for analysis, 164 (47.1%) received an opioid at hospital discharge. In total, 17 of the 342 patients (5.0%) became long-term users, noted to be more common in patients who received an opioid prescription at discharge (8.7% vs 1.6%; P = 0.006). Neither total ICU morphine milligram equivalent (MME) nor average daily ICU MME administration were found to correlate with daily MME prescription quantity at discharge ( R2 = 0.008 and R2 = 0.03, respectively). Following control for potentially confounding variables, total ICU MME administration remained an insignificant predictor of subsequent receipt of an opioid prescription at discharge and long-term opioid use. Conclusion and Relevance This study failed to find a significant relationship between ICU opioid use in opioid-naïve patients and subsequent opioid use. These findings highlight the need to focus on transitions points between the ICU and discharge as potential opportunities to reduce inappropriate opioid continuation.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (2) ◽  
pp. 195
Author(s):  
Ignacio J Previgliano ◽  
Bader Andres ◽  
Pawel J Ciesielczyk ◽  
◽  
◽  
...  

Cognitive impairment after critical illness (CIACI) is a frequent consequence of serious disease or injury that has been reported in as many as 66 % of patients, 3 months after an illness requiring intensive care unit hospitalisation. The condition has been recognised only within the past 15 years and its pathological mechanisms are, as yet, incompletely understood. The neurological changes and cellular and inflammatory processes of CIACI overlap with those of stroke, traumatic brain injury and neurodegenerative disorders. Patients also show brain atrophy, which worsens with the duration of intensive care unit stay. Risk factors associated with CIACI include depression, biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease (e.g. apolipoprotein E), delirium, exposure to some drugs (e.g. fentanyl, morphine and propofol) and intubation. Current strategies to prevent or treat CIACI include treatments to reduce agitation and delirium and physical and mental rehabilitation including cognitive therapy. Many brain diseases and injuries affect the functioning of the neurovascular unit (NVU), which constitutes the key cellular building block of the blood–brain barrier (BBB). CIACI is believed to affect the integrity of the NVU and it is among the potential targets for therapy. Neurotrophic factors (NTFs), such as brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) are known to play an important role in neurogenesis, maintenance of NVU structure and neuronal repair after disease and injury. This led to the development of strategies including the NTF-preparation (Cerebrolysin®), which is effective as a post-stroke therapy and has potential in the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease and brain injury as well as CIACI. There are currently no proven treatments for CIACI; improved understanding of the condition and further evaluation of NTFs may lead to effective treatments, which are vital to tackle this increasingly serious public health problem.


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