Chapter 12
Approach to Supportive Care and Noninvasive Bedside Monitoring
Considering a basic checklist of supportive care for every ICU patient is important for several reasons. First, in the rush to treat a critically ill patient’s acute problems, one may overlook simple but important care. Second, serious illness invariably affects remote systems not involved in the primary pathophysiologic process. Third, treatment aimed at correcting one problem may create others. Supportive ICU care conforms to the general schema of admitting orders for any hospitalized patient (Table 12.1). In addition, it is helpful to systematically address possible needs for each organ system (“from head to foot”), including neurologic, ophthalmologic, otolaryngologic, integumentary, endocrine, metabolic, respiratory, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, renal, musculoskeletal, and integumentary. In the head-injured patient, for example, failure to specifically address prevention of deep venous thrombosis, gastric stress ulceration, or skin injury may have serious consequences.
TABLE 12.1
Basic Orders for Patients Admitted to the ICU
BASIC ORDERS | ICU CONSIDERATIONS |
Diagnosis | Are there diagnosis-specific protocols or pathways? Do the patient’s characteristics match admission criteria? |
Condition | All but patients admitted for monitoring should be identified as “critical.” |
Allergies | Extremely important to inquire and document any drug allergies. |
Activity | Consider careful and explicit rationale for restraints, special beds, positioning. |
Vital signs | Each ICU has its own frequency of vital signs. Specify use of non-invasive monitors (e.g., pulse oximetry); list parameters for physician notification (e.g., call physician for heart rate > 120 or < 60). |
Diet | Specify use of nasogastric or duodenal feeding tubes where appropriate; estimate caloric requirements; consider special electrolyte or fluid needs; maintain some enteral feeding for patients receiving hyperalimentation, unless contraindicated (Chapter 15). Use nutrition consultation and special hyperalimentation order sheets. Consider measuring nitrogen balance, where appropriate. |
Diagnostic procedures | Will alert nursing staff to coordinate offsite transport or to prepare the equipment for bedside procedures. |
Fluids | Pay attention to decreased, insensible water loss in ventilated patients (may gain up to 500 mL/24 h). |
Special considerations | Eye protection for paralyzed patients; mouth care for intubated patients. |
Preventive measures | Use subcutaneous heparin or pneumatic compression devices for deep venous thrombosis prophylaxis; use enteral feeding, sucralfate, proton pump inhibitor, or H2 blocker for stress ulcer prophylaxis for patients in high-risk group (Box 12.1). |
General medications | Assure adequate control of pain and anxiety (Chapter 5); write for a PRN (as needed) sedative for sleep (Chapter 44). |
Special medications | Particular care should be given to drug interactions, impaired renal and hepatic clearance, and decreased blood flow in shock states (Chapter 17). |
Body Positioning
Improved reliability of periodic turning partly explains the increasing use of rotational therapeutic beds. These devices perform timed alternating lateral positioning through sequential inflation or other mechanical means. One large prospective randomized study and a meta-analysis identified decreased development of pneumonia with rotational therapy. Lateral positioning may improve oxygenation in patients with severe unilateral pneumonia, who often respond favorably when the “good” (nonconsolidated) lung is “down” (in the dependent position). The rationale for this improved oxygenation is that gravity favors blood flow to the dependent, uninvolved lung and increases pulmonary blood flow to the better-ventilated alveoli. This effect of gravity on pulmonary blood flow improves ventilation/perfusion matching (fewer alveoli with low ventilation/perfusion) and decreases shunting through fluid-filled alveoli (whose ventilation/perfusion = 0), and both changes improve oxygenation. In evaluating a critically ill patient, it is important to interpret alterations in oxygenation in the context of any positional changes that may affect ventilation-perfusion matching.
Some centers treat patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) by periodic turning to and from the prone position to improve oxygenation (see Chapter 73). Extensively investigated, prone positioning consistently produces transient but significant improvement in oxygenation indices in many patients, but without conferring survival or other outcome benefits.
In the case of severe hemoptysis (usually > 300 mL/24 hours) from a unilateral lesion, the opposite recommendation applies: turn patients so that the bleeding lung is in the dependent position (“bad” lung down). In this circumstance, gravity deters blood from spilling across the midline to the contralateral, nonhemorrhaging lung. This maneuver may be lifesaving in an emergent situation (see Chapter 79).
Some patients with neurologic disease may benefit from elevating the head of the bed to 30 degrees, which reduces intracranial pressure up to 10 mmHg. However, elevating the patient’s upper body may create extra shear stress exposure to the skin of the back, sacrum, and lower extremities, increasing the risk of skin injury and breakdown (Chapter 42).
Skin Care (see also Chapter 42)
Specific Integumentary Conditions
Wounds
Generally, dress wounds with sterile dry dressings for 24 to 48 hours after surgery, until drainage ceases. Subsequently, change dressings for convenience to protect any exposed surface and sutures and to observe the wound for signs of redness, swelling, or purulence. Contaminated wounds are generally managed “open”—that is, without primary closure. Wet-to-dry dressings may be applied using normal saline or other sterile solutions; routine use of Dakin’s solution, povidone-iodine, and other antiseptics may impede wound healing.
Pressure Ulcers
Pressure ulcers occur from immobility or appliances in contact with the skin (see Table 42.1, Chapter 42). The Agency for Health Care Policy and Research has developed comprehensive guidelines for the problem of pressure ulcers. Prevention and treatment of pressure ulcers are described in Chapter 42.
Special Care Beds
Because of the frequency of pressure ulcers and other skin injury in the ICU, particular attention has been paid to the interface between patient and bed, leading to a number of specialized approaches (see Box 42.1, Chapter 42).
A fourth approach employs air-fluidized silicon beads, covered by a semipermeable material. This bed produces a “floating” sensation and virtually eliminates concentrated pressure points on the patient’s skin. In addition, the constant airflow keeps the skin dry and augments insensible water loss. One drawback is this device requires the patient to be fully recumbent. Should the need for cardiopulmonary resuscitation arise, it is imperative to shut off airflow in order to provide a firm horizontal surface.
Malnourished ICU patients with diabetes, with poor skin perfusion subjected to multiple dressing changes and skin punctures, obesity, or fecal incontinence have high risk for skin ischemia and pressure ulcers. Place these patients on an appropriate mattress overlay or low air-loss or air-fluidized bed to prevent serious skin breakdown. The selection of the specific product depends on local hospital and clinical practice as well as on individualized patient assessment. Because these specialty beds are effective but very expensive, appropriate use includes restricted utilization to those most high-risk patients (see Chapter 42).