Autonomic nervous system function and depth of sedation in adults receiving mechanical ventilation.
The authors of the article were attempting to discover how the autonomic nervous system affected the depth of sedation which occurred when a patient was placed on mechanical ventilation. The reason for this concern was that patients have been known to have adverse effects due to changes in the autonomic functions during critical illness. The stated thesis of the article is to understand autonomic responses better.
This study was part of a larger study which monitored patients for a 24-hour period "in the medical respiratory and coronary care ICUs at Virginia Commonwealth University." The study chose patients who were not compromised by receiving neuromuscular blocking agents and had no scalp lacerations or skull abnormalities. The patients had to be more than 18 years old at the time of the trial. Patients heart rate variability and sedative state were constantly monitored during the research.
The main finding from the study was that "deep sedation was associated with depressed parasympathetic nervous activity and that measures of sympathetic nervous activity and heart rate did not change with changes in the depth of sedation." From this finding the researchers believe that measuring heart rate variance in the ICU is justified in some situations. The specific situation would be when the patients with cardiac disease because there can be related cardiac complications as a result of the depressed heart rate variability. However, the authors suggest that further study which was targeted specifically at this issue may be warranted. Their study was based on secondary data.
2. Clorhexedine, toothbrushing, and preventing ventilator-associated pneumonia in critically all adults.
The main thrust of the article was to determine if there is a specific measure that can be taken to reduce the amount of patients who contract pneumonia when they are placed in a ventilator. The hypothesis was that regular cleaning of the mouth and teeth could defeat the bacteria which cause pneumonia and thus reduce its occurrence. The two treatments used to determine the effectiveness of this hypothesis were tooth brushing and chlorhexidine either together as a treatment or separate.
Since it is noted that there are many factors associated with ventilation that increase the possibility that a patient will get pneumonia, it was theorized that inadequate dental care could also be a factor. The authors of the study noted that "Dental plaque can provide a habitat for microorganisms responsible for ventilator-associated pneumonia." Thus, researchers found 547 patients who met the criteria of having been intubated at least 24 hours prior to intervention, and they could not already have been infected with pneumonia. The patients were put into one of four groups -- tooth brushing only, chlorhexidine only, tooth brushing and chlorhexidine, or a control group which received normal care -- for the study.
It was found that tooth brushing by itself did not reduce the occurrence of ventilator-associated pneumonia, however when a chlorhexidine swab was used the patients were less likely to contract pneumonia. The researchers believe that, along with other measures to prevent VAP, chlorhexidine sabs should be employed since VAP is a significant issue among intubated patients.
3. Chronic critical illness: Prevalence, profile, and pathophysiology.
The authors of this study attempt to give physicians and nurse who work in the intensive care unit further understanding of chronic critical illness. All patients in an ICU are undergoing some form of acute critical illness or they would not be in the ICU. But that can turn into chronic status which makes it more difficult for the patient to recover. Chronic critical illness is marked by "recurrent episodes of instability, need for prolonged medical and nursing care, multiple organ dysfunction or failure, ongoing need for life-sustaining interventions, and uncertain trajectory for recovery." The reason for acute status changing into chronic is unknown, but the purpose of the study is to inform caregivers "essential information about the prevalence and profile of the chronically critically ill patient."
The authors of the study did not conduct their own investigation of the phenomenon with their own critically ill patients, but rater they looked at research that had been conducted already to determine the signs and effective treatments for a person with CCI. First, only approximately 6% to 10% of critically ill patients reach this threshold, but these patients account for a very large portion of ICU care costs. There was found to be no exact definition of this group of patients (historically it was associated with prolonged stays on mechanical ventilators, but that definition has changed. The authors determine a more comprehensive...
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