Article

Long-term complications of critical care.

Section of Pulmonary/Critical Care Medicine, Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC, USA.
Critical care medicine (impact factor: 6.37). 10/2010; 39(2):371-9. DOI:10.1097/CCM.0b013e3181fd66e5 pp.371-9
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT As critical care advances and intensive care unit mortality declines, the number of survivors of critical illness is increasing. These survivors frequently experience long-lasting complications of critical care. As a result, it is important to understand these complications and implement evidence-based practices to minimize them.
Database searches and review of relevant medical literature.
Critical illness and intensive care unit care influence a wide range of long-term patient outcomes, with some impairments persisting for 5-15 yrs. Impaired pulmonary function, greater healthcare utilization, and increased mortality are observed in intensive care survivors. Neuromuscular weakness and impairments in both physical function and related aspects of quality of life are common and may be long-lasting. These complications may be reduced by multidisciplinary physical rehabilitation initiated early and continued throughout the intensive care unit care stay and by providing patient education for self-rehabilitation after hospital discharge. Common neuropsychiatric complications, including cognitive impairment and symptoms of depression and posttraumatic stress disorder, are frequently associated with intensive care unit sedation, delirium or delusional memories, and long-term impairments in quality of life.
Survivors of critical illness are frequently left with a legacy of long-term physical, neuropsychiatric, and quality of life impairments. Understanding patient and intensive care risk factors can help identify patients who are most at risk of these complications. Furthermore, modifiable risk factors and beneficial interventions are increasingly being identified to help inform practical management recommendations to reduce the prevalence and impact of these long-term complications.

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Keywords

Common neuropsychiatric complications
 
critical care
 
Database searches
 
evidence-based practices
 
greater healthcare utilization
 
Impaired pulmonary function
 
impairments persisting
 
intensive care risk factors
 
intensive care survivors
 
intensive care unit care
 
intensive care unit care influence
 
intensive care unit mortality declines
 
intensive care unit sedation
 
long-term complications
 
long-term patient outcomes
 
modifiable risk factors
 
multidisciplinary physical rehabilitation
 
posttraumatic stress disorder
 
practical management recommendations
 
Understanding patient
 

Sanjay V Desai