Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY.
Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, Cincinnati, Ohio.
Semin Neurol. 2024 Jun;44(3):398-411. doi: 10.1055/s-0044-1787011. Epub 2024 Jun 19.
Post-intensive care syndrome (PICS) refers to unintended consequences of critical care that manifest as new or worsening impairments in physical functioning, cognitive ability, or mental health. As intensive care unit (ICU) survival continues to improve, PICS is becoming increasingly recognized as a public health problem. Studies that focus on PICS have typically excluded patients with acute brain injuries and chronic neurodegenerative problems. However, patients who require neurocritical care undoubtedly suffer from impairments that overlap substantially with those encompassed by PICS. A major challenge is to distinguish between impairments related to brain injury and those that occur as a consequence of critical care. The general principles for the prevention and management of PICS and multidomain impairments in patients with moderate and severe neurological injuries are similar including the ICU liberation bundle, multidisciplinary team-based care throughout the continuum of care, and increasing awareness regarding the challenges of critical care survivorship among patients, families, and multidisciplinary team members. An extension of this concept, PICS-Family (PICS-F) refers to the mental health consequences of the intensive care experience for families and loved ones of ICU survivors. A dyadic approach to ICU survivorship with an emphasis on recognizing families and caregivers that may be at risk of developing PICS-F after neurocritical care illness can help improve outcomes for ICU survivors. In this review, we will summarize our current understanding of PICS and PICS-F, emerging literature on PICS in severe acute brain injury, strategies for preventing and treating PICS, and share our recommendations for future directions.
重症监护后综合征(PICS)是指重症监护的意外后果,表现为身体功能、认知能力或心理健康方面出现新的或恶化的损伤。随着重症监护病房(ICU)存活率的持续提高,PICS 越来越被认为是一个公共卫生问题。关注 PICS 的研究通常排除了急性脑损伤和慢性神经退行性疾病患者。然而,需要神经重症监护的患者无疑会遭受与 PICS 所涵盖的损伤有很大重叠的损伤。一个主要的挑战是区分与脑损伤相关的损伤和作为重症监护后果发生的损伤。预防和管理 PICS 以及中度和重度神经损伤患者的多领域损伤的一般原则是相似的,包括 ICU 解放包、贯穿整个护理连续体的多学科团队护理,以及提高患者、家庭和多学科团队成员对重症监护生存挑战的认识。这一概念的延伸是 PICS-家庭(PICS-F),指的是 ICU 幸存者的家庭和亲人在重症监护期间经历的心理健康后果。对 ICU 幸存者进行对偶方法的研究,强调识别可能在神经重症监护疾病后出现 PICS-F 的家庭和护理人员,可以帮助改善 ICU 幸存者的结局。在这篇综述中,我们将总结我们对 PICS 和 PICS-F 的现有认识,包括严重急性脑损伤中 PICS 的新兴文献、预防和治疗 PICS 的策略,并分享我们对未来方向的建议。