Jackson James C, Hart Robert P, Gordon Sharon M, Hopkins Ramona O, Girard Timothy D, Ely E Wesley
Clinical Research Center of Excellence, VA Tennessee Valley Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center, Nashville, TN 37212, USA.
Crit Care. 2007;11(1):R27. doi: 10.1186/cc5707.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a potentially serious psychiatric disorder that has traditionally been associated with traumatic stressors such as participation in combat, violent assault, and survival of natural disasters. Recently, investigators have reported that the experience of critical illness can also lead to PTSD, although details of the association between critical illness and PTSD remain unclear.
We conducted keyword searches of MEDLINE and Psych Info and investigations of secondary references for all articles pertaining to PTSD in medical intensive care unit (ICU) survivors.
From 78 screened papers, 16 studies (representing 15 cohorts) and approximately 920 medical ICU patients met inclusion criteria. A total of 10 investigations used brief PTSD screening tools exclusively as opposed to more comprehensive diagnostic methods. Reported PTSD prevalence rates varied from 5% to 63%, with the three highest prevalence estimates occurring in studies with fewer than 30 patients. Loss to follow-up rates ranged from 10% to 70%, with average loss to follow-up rates exceeding 30%.
Exact PTSD prevalence rates cannot be determined due to methodological limitations such as selection bias, loss to follow-up, and the wide use of screening (as opposed to diagnostic) instruments. In general, the high prevalence rates reported in the literature are likely to be overestimates due to the limitations of the investigations conducted to date. Although PTSD may be a serious problem in some survivors of critical illness, data on the whole population are inconclusive. Because the magnitude of the problem posed by PTSD in survivors of critical illness is unknown, there remains a pressing need for larger and more methodologically rigorous investigations of PTSD in ICU survivors.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是一种潜在的严重精神疾病,传统上与创伤性应激源相关,如参与战斗、遭受暴力袭击以及在自然灾害中幸存。最近,研究人员报告称,危重病经历也可能导致创伤后应激障碍,尽管危重病与创伤后应激障碍之间关联的细节仍不清楚。
我们对MEDLINE和Psych Info进行了关键词搜索,并对所有与医学重症监护病房(ICU)幸存者创伤后应激障碍相关的文章进行了二次参考文献调查。
在78篇筛选出的论文中,16项研究(代表15个队列)和大约920名医学ICU患者符合纳入标准。共有10项调查仅使用了创伤后应激障碍简短筛查工具,而非更全面的诊断方法。报告的创伤后应激障碍患病率从5%到63%不等,患病率估计最高的三项研究患者人数少于30人。失访率从10%到70%不等,平均失访率超过30%。
由于存在选择偏倚、失访以及广泛使用筛查(而非诊断)工具等方法学限制,无法确定确切的创伤后应激障碍患病率。总体而言,由于迄今为止所开展调查的局限性,文献中报告的高患病率可能被高估。虽然创伤后应激障碍在一些危重病幸存者中可能是一个严重问题,但关于整个人口的数据尚无定论。由于危重病幸存者中创伤后应激障碍所带来问题的严重程度未知,因此迫切需要对ICU幸存者的创伤后应激障碍进行规模更大、方法学上更严谨的调查。