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Daily interruption of sedative infusions and complications of critical illness in mechanically ventilated patients. Critical Care Med 2004 Vol.32 No.6 R3 曾耀賢. Critical patients /c MV: frequent require sedation and analgesia BZD, propofol and Haldol for sedation Opiates for analgesia
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Daily interruption of sedative infusions and complications of critical illness in mechanically ventilated patients Critical Care Med 2004 Vol.32 No.6 R3 曾耀賢
Critical patients /c MV: frequent require sedation and analgesia • BZD, propofol and Haldol for sedation • Opiates for analgesia • However, the strategies of these drugs are variable • Developed protocol to minimize detrimental effects of overdose or accumulation • Daily interruption of continuous sedation • Daily interruption until patients was awake • Reduction of average duration of MV: 2.4 days • Reduction in average ICU length of stay: 3.5 days
Daily interruption of sedation • MV and critical illness: more easy to cause nosocomial complications (VAP) • Long duration of MV & ICU LOS: more complications of critical illness • Seven complications: • Ventilator-associated pneumonia • Upper gastrointestinal hemorrhage • Bactremia • Barotrauma • Venous thromboembolic disease • Cholestasis • Sinusitis Determine whether the strategy was associated with a reduction in these complications
Methods • Patients and Study Design • From database of our previous published, prospective, randomized-controlled study • 128 patients database: provided to investigator to evaluate and ensure accurate assignment • Investigator were not involved in original study; no documentation of study was present; all charts were reviewed independently
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • Demographic data • Age, gender, BW, Acute physiology & chronic healthy evaluation II severity of illness score • Use of a ventilator strategy utilizing permissive hypercapnia • Hypoventilation to allow Pco2 ≧ 50mmHg • ICU LOS • Duration of mechanical ventilation
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • To establish the presence of the identified seven complications associated with MV & clinical illness • Predefined clinical criteria • Complications were selected based on • Clinical importance • Frequency • Reliability of disclosure from a retrospective chart review • Complications: required to be new & distinct
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • Ventilation associated pneumonia: • new lung opacity, • ≧2 criteria (BT <36 or >38℃; WBC <4K or >10K; purulent secretion) • UGI bleeding: • confirm by UE; mesenteric angiography; • combination of grossly visualized blood from NG and subsequent blood transfusion
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • Bacteremia: • positive blood culture; • positive of CNS required serial demonstration • Barotrauma: • pneumothorax requiring chest tube insertion • Venous thromboembolic disease • Venous thrombosis by Doppler, venography, infused CT
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • Pulmonary embolus • Proven by pulmonary angiogram, infused spiral CT • Cholestasis • Elevated ALKP, Bil T; imaging study; need for procedural intervention • Sinusitis • Gross purulence from nares or sinus fluid present • Sinus CT scan and subsequent endoscopic drainage
Methods • Data Collection and Definition of Variables • Deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis was defined as • Daily administration of subcutaneous unfractionated or LMWH or • Intermittent pneumatic compression devices for period ≧75% of time spent in the ICU • Stress ulcer prophylaxis was defined as • Daily PPI, H2 blocker or sucralfate for period ≧75% of time spent in the ICU
Results • 126 patients had medical records available • 66 patients in the sedative interruption group • 60 patients in the control group
Results • Similar in the two groups • Demographic characteristic • Acute physiology and chronic healthy evaluation II scores • Frequency of use of permissive hypercapnia ventilation strategy
Results • Incidence of prophylaxis is similar • Deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis • 90.2 % in daily sedation interruption group • 92.5 % in the control group • p = 1.0 • Gastric stress ulcer prophylaxis • 90.5 % in daily sedation interruption group • 96.3 % in the control group • p = 1.0
Results • Outcome • After blinded assessment for all complications • Sedative interruption group experienced • 13 complications in 12 patients (2.8%) • Control group experienced • 26 complications in 19 patients (6.2%) • p = 0.04 (generalized estimating equation)
Results • Outcome • Six of the seven complications occurred more frequently in control group
Results • Kaplan-Meier analysis of time from intubation or from ICU admission to first complication
Discussion • Pain and anxiety are common among patients in ICU, it may be attributed to • Discomfort of procedures (intubation, MV) • Isolation from familiar surroundings • Lack of control or autonomy • Uncertainty regarding prognosis
Discussion • Sedatives and analgesics are frequently administered during MV • Alleviate pain and anxiety • Decrease excessive oxygen consumption • Facilitate nursing care • So, bedside nursing role of careful monitoring of sedatives and analgesia in extremely important
Discussion • The use of sedation protocols mandating daily interruption of continuous infusions or a nursing-directed protocol targeting • Reduction in sedative dosing shorten duration of MV & ICU LOS • Such reductions in sedation without increasing adverse events (removal of ETT or CVP)
Discussion • Determine whether a protocol of daily interruption of sedative infusion affect incidence of common complications • Complications are routinely studied individually • study complications in aggregate create a risk of possible interrelationship not immediately recognized • Comparison between groups was analyzed using the general estimating equation • Permits comparisons of the sum of complications while accounting for the possibility of interrelationships between multiple complications among individual patients
Discussion • Kaplan-Meier curves: data for the time to first complication • Disparity later in the ICU course more ICU time, more increase the chance of complication • Unlike general estimating equation: evaluate the sum of all complications & potential interrelationship • K-M curve evaluate only the first complication in each patient No differences between these two group
Discussion • Some complications (VAP) have been clearly linked to duration of MV • Cook et al.: cumulative risk of VAP increase over time, risk of VAP per day • 3.3% at MV day 52.3% at day 101.3% at day 15 • Bacteremia: associated with venous catheters • More present when intubation and MV • Understandable if higher rate in control group
Discussion • Critical patients are frequent immobilized • Subjected to procedures involving invasive instrument • More venous thromboembolic events, even prophylaxis • At least 4 complications: direct result of invasive instrumentation • Bacteremia (venous catheters) • Shorten duration of MV & ICU LOS reduce the need and duration of venous catheter placement • VAP (endotracheal intubation)
Discussion • At least 4 complications: direct result of invasive instrumentation • Barotrauma • Reducing intubation time reduce incidence? • Lacking convincing data to support • Iatrogenic pneumothorax during central catheter placement • NG and supine positioning sinusitis Shortening ventilator and ICU time decrease the need for these invasive devices
Discussion • This study has limitations worth nothing • Described complications were not prospectively defined and followed in the original investigation • To minimized bias • Database was reviewed blinded • Investigators had never seen the database before this study • Didn’t prospectively seek to identify complications in the original study • Possible some were undetected • However, potential difference in incidence of undetected complications seed unlikely
Discussion • Many of complications are routinely sought, or • Only identified by the need for an intervention • Barotrauma leading to chest tube placement • Cholecystitis or sinusitis leading to surgery • Further reducing the likelihood of underrecognition of these complications • Retrospective evaluation based on medical chart • Inherent limitations • in CVP manipulation or MV setting: not reliably
Conclusion • Common complications of critical illness reduce • when intubated, mechanically ventilated patients by protocol of daily sedative interruption • Improved outcomes are likely the result of reduced duration of MV and ICU LOS