/
Delirium In ICU  by Kirsty Ryan and Alistair White Delirium In ICU  by Kirsty Ryan and Alistair White

Delirium In ICU by Kirsty Ryan and Alistair White - PowerPoint Presentation

lois-ondreau
lois-ondreau . @lois-ondreau
Follow
346 views
Uploaded On 2018-11-06

Delirium In ICU by Kirsty Ryan and Alistair White - PPT Presentation

Contents What is Delirium Why is it important How do we recognise it What causes it How do we prevent it How do we treat it Definition An acute state of confusion NICE 2010 Acute onset fluctuating confusion ID: 718223

icu delirium rass treatment delirium icu treatment rass pharmacological sedation cam sleep patient treat staff care early risk patients

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Delirium In ICU by Kirsty Ryan and Alis..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Delirium

In ICU

by Kirsty Ryan and Alistair WhiteSlide2

Contents:

What is Delirium?

Why is it important?

How do we recognise it?What causes it?How do we prevent it?How do we treat it?Slide3

Definition:

An acute state of confusion (NICE, 2010)

Acute onset, fluctuating confusion

Inattention

Impaired consciousness

Disordered thinkingSlide4

Types of Delirium

Hyperactive delirium:

restlessness, agitation,

aggression

.

Hypoactive delirium:

(Most Common)

sleepy

, withdrawn and quiet, difficult to recognise.Mixed! Hypo-Hyperactive DeliriumSlide5

Why is it important?

Prevalence! 33 - 85%

of people in ICU develop delirium.

It increases mortality three fold!

Delirium is associated with poor short and long term outcomes.

It increases risk of long hospital stays.

It causes distress to patients, families and staff!

It can be difficult to manage.

Approximately half of all episodes of delirium are preventable

!Slide6

How would it feel?

 

Frustrating.

Anxiety provoking.

Confusing.

Upsetting.

Despair.

Exhausting.

People can also develop PTSD from their experience of delirium! Slide7

PTSD and Delirium in ICU

A patient who has experienced Delirium in ICU can go onto develop PTSD well after their delirium has resolved.

PTSD: when a person has flash backs, anxieties and fears surrounding their past experiences in ICU with Delirium, to the point where it is affecting their day-to-day activities.

They may be so affected they refuse appointments, or even stop going out.Early recognition and referral to psychology!Slide8

How do we recognise Delirium?

Symptom recognition

Regular CAM ICU assessments!Slide9

Symptoms:

Less aware of surroundings.

Reduced ability to orientate to surroundings.

Unable to follow conversation/ speak clearly.

Paranoia.

Vivid dreams that may continue when someone wakes up.

Auditory hallucinations.

Visual hallucinations.

Concerned that other people are trying to harm them.

Sleeping during the day and waking up during the night.

Have moods that quickly change.

Confusion at particular times: evenings and nights.Slide10

CAM ICU

It takes 2 minutes to do

Fast access:

on the back of your ICU chart!

It is evidence based. Slide11

What Causes Delirium?

Patient

Illness

Iatrogenic

Pre-morbid Cognitive Status

Infection / Sepsis

Surgical / Bypass Time

Co-morbidities

Organ Dysfunction

Drugs / Sedatives

Age

ARDS

Blood Transfusion + Anaemia

Hearing/Visual Impairment

Metabolic Disturbance

Environment

Alcohol/ Smoking/ Drug use

Hypotension

SleepSlide12

How do we prevent it?

Treat Illnesses as much as possible.

Adjust Iatrogenic causes (What we do) as much as possible!

Use a Targeted RASS system: so we reduce sedation!

Delirium is not always preventable!Slide13

Targeted RASS

RED

(RASS -3/-5)

Clinical

condition requires deeper level of sedation (RASS -3/-5) to facilitate resuscitation, interventions and stabilisation.

AMBER

(RASS -2/-1)

Clinical condition requires moderate

level of sedation (RASS -2/-1) to enable continued stabilisation and optimisation of clinical condition.

GREEN

(RASS> -1)

Clinical

condition ready for sedation to be stopped and trail of

extubation

.Slide14

Targeted RASS

Communication is clear between Consultant and Nursing staff.

Less sedation lowing the risk of delirium.

Amber sedation can allow for CAM-ICU assessment – early recognition.

Amber and green are the best, allowing for spontaneous breathing (good for lungs and delirium prevention).Slide15

How do we treat it?

Early recognition through CAM-ICU Assessment!

Non-Pharmacological Treatment

Pharmacological TreatmentSlide16

Non-Pharmacological Management

Sleep Hygiene

Orientation

Family Early Mobilisation Early De-catheterisation“Peek-a-Boo” Mitts

Nutrition

Support the family too – offer diaries.Slide17

Sleep Hygiene

Lack of sleep can cause delirium!

Promote a healthy sleep pattern.

Reduce noises and lights at night.

Reduce as much as possible the number of interventions.

Make sure people are not too warm/cold as this disturbs sleep.

Don’t let sleep deprivation go on for days!Slide18

Pharmacological Treatment

Sedation can cause delirium! Aim for a Low RASS with minimal sedation

Daily sedation holds and spontaneous breathing trials

Look for and treat pain

Consider Alpha Agonists: Clonidine/ Dexmedetomidine

Avoid Benzodiazepines

Treat withdrawal

Treat underlying illnesses – Temp, sepsis, metabolic, Anaemia, Pain

Haloperidol/ quetiapine as per ACC delirium guidelines.Slide19

ACC Delirium Guidelines

Hyperactive

Hypoactive

TBI Associated Delirium

Haloperidol

Risperidone

Olanzapine/ Quetiapine

Olanzapine/ Quetiapine

Haloperidol

(low dose only)

Clonidine/ Dexmedetomidine

Consider and Treat Sleep Deprivation

Dexmedetomidine/ ClonidineSlide20

Rescue for Severe Agitation

Midazolam 5mg IV

Repeat 10mins if required

ORLorazepam 0.5 – 1mg Propofol infusionSlide21

Sleep Deprivation

Trazadone 50- 100mg

Zopiclone 7.5 – 15mgSlide22

Do pharmacological interventions actually make a difference to incidence of delirium?

Pharmacological treatments remain controversial. Risk of treatment has to be weighed up against benefits.

There are lots of small and not so robust trials for the treatment of delirium. Evidence is controversial and sometimes contradictory. There is not enough evidence to change current practice but this is a developing area of research.

Several trials investigating the efficacy of antipsychotics show they achieve treatment objectives in most patients but not all.

Antipsychotics can have negative side-effects on cognitive function, over-sedation and can lead to a prolonged QT interval and

Torsades

de Points.

A SMALL recent trial with a one off dose of intra-operative dexamethasone has shown to lower incidence of delirium in Cardiac Surgery. Again this is not enough evidence to change practice as yet – further more robust evidence needs to be presented.

Trazadone is a non-tricyclic anti-depressant that helps with insomnia. Effective in the elderly. Slide23

How patients and family said they wanted to be looked after …

Ensure patient and staff safety - monitoring - increase staff to patient ratio.

Communicate with MDT.

Consistency and sharing of knowledge between staff.

Stay calm - including family members!

Ensure staff and family are well supported.

Education.

Humour.

Flexible visiting.

Reassurance delirium is not permanent.

Use patient dairies!!!Slide24

Is it applicable to Neuro?

Targetted

RASS and CAM-ICU are still applicable to Neuro ICU.

It can be difficult to distinguish neurological deficit and delirium.

Innovative ways of communication can still allow effective assessment.

Early referral to AHP can aid early mobilisation and thorough assessments in differentiating delirium and neurological deficits.

A positive CAM-ICU in Neuro can identify deterioration of neurological function.

Neuro – ICU and HDU are currently trialling a new restraining mitt!Slide25

Any other reasons to implement? …

Plan, Implement, Assess, Evaluate

How can we as an MDT justify management plans, treatment plans, administration of medications if a validated assessment has not been used to diagnose the condition?

They have delirium …said who, how do you know? … The validated assessment tool CAM-ICU confirms diagnosis and justifies subsequent treatments.

Most of the non-pharmacological prevention and management points are beneficial to the patient for more than just delirium centred.

Optimisation can increase patient recovery, patient flow.

Cost effective!Slide26

Quiz!

How common is Delirium in ICU?

Name two types of delirium.

What is the most common type of delirium?

Name

2 things that we may do in ICU that increase risk of delirium.

Where is the CAM-ICU assessment tool?

Name 2 different non-pharmacological treatment approaches.

Name 2 Pharmacological treatment approaches.Slide27

References / Useful Resources

Bannon, L, et al. 2016. Impact of non- pharmacological interventions on prevention and treatment of delirium in critically ill patients: protocol for a systematic review of quantitative and qualitative research. Systematic Reviews. 5(75). Pp 1-9.

10.1186/s13643-016-0254-0

Burns, K. et al. 2009. Delirium after Cardiac Surgery: A retrospective case-control study of incidence and risk factors in a Canadian

Sample.

BC Medical Journal

. 51

(5).

Pp206-210.

Healthcare

Improvement Scotland. 2013. Staff, patients and families experiences of giving and receiving care during an episode of delirium in an acute hospital care setting. [Online]. [Accessed: 14/04/2016]. Available from: http://www.healthcareimprovementscotland.org/our_work/person-centred_care/opac_improvement_programme/delirium_report.aspxKostera, S. et al. 2011. Risk Factors of Delirium after Cardiac Surgery: A Systematic Review.

European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing

. 10

(4)

. Pp197-204.

National Institute for Health and Care Excellence. 2010.

Delirium: prevention, diagnosis and management.

[Online]. [Accessed: 12/04/2016]. Available from:

https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance/cg103/chapter/introduction

Page, V et al. 2009. Routine delirium monitoring in a UK critical care unit.

Critical Care

. 13

(1)

, R16.

Peterson, J. et al. 2006. Delirium and its motoric subtypes: a study of 614 critically ill patients.

Journal of the American Geriatrics Society

. 54

(3)

. Pp479-484

Royal College of Psychiatrists. 2012.

Delirium

. [Online]. [Accessed:12/04/2016]. Available from:

http://www.rcpsych.ac.uk/healthadvice/problemsdisorders/delirium.aspx

Zaal

, J. et al. 2015 A systematic Review of risk factors for delirium in the ICU.

Critical Care

. 43(

1

). Pp40-47.

http://www.icudelirium.org/

http://www.icudelirium.org/docs/CAM_ICU_training.pdf