Discomfort and factual recollection in intensive care unit patients

Johannes P van de Leur, Cees P van der Schans, Bert G Loef, Betto G Deelman, Jan H B Geertzen, Jan H Zwaveling, Johannes P van de Leur, Cees P van der Schans, Bert G Loef, Betto G Deelman, Jan H B Geertzen, Jan H Zwaveling

Abstract

Introduction: A stay in the intensive care unit (ICU), although potentially life-saving, may cause considerable discomfort to patients. However, retrospective assessment of discomfort is difficult because recollection of stressful events may be impaired by sedation and severe illness during the ICU stay. This study addresses the following questions. What is the incidence of discomfort reported by patients recently discharged from an ICU? What were the sources of discomfort reported? What was the degree of factual recollection during patients' stay in the ICU? Finally, was discomfort reported more often in patients with good factual recollection?

Methods: All ICU patients older than 18 years who had needed prolonged (>24 hour) admission with tracheal intubation and mechanical ventilation were consecutively included. Within three days after discharge from the ICU, a structured, in-person interview was conducted with each individual patient. All patients were asked to complete a questionnaire consisting of 14 questions specifically concerning the environment of the ICU they had stayed in. Furthermore, they were asked whether they remembered any discomfort during their stay; if they did then they were asked to specify which sources of discomfort they could recall. A reference group of surgical ward patients, matched by sex and age to the ICU group, was studied to validate the questionnaire.

Results: A total of 125 patients discharged from the ICU were included in this study. Data for 123 ICU patients and 48 surgical ward patients were analyzed. The prevalence of recollection of any type of discomfort in the ICU patients was 54% (n = 66). These 66 patients were asked to identify the sources of discomfort, and presence of an endotracheal tube, hallucinations and medical activities were identified as such sources. The median (min-max) score for factual recollection in the ICU patients was 15 (0-28). The median (min-max) score for factual recollection in the reference group was 25 (19-28). Analysis revealed that discomfort was positively related to factual recollection (odds ratio 1.1; P < 0.001), especially discomfort caused by the presence of an endotracheal tube, medical activities and noise. Hallucinations were reported more often with increasing age. Pain as a source of discomfort was predominantly reported by younger patients.

Conclusion: Among postdischarge ICU patients, 54% recalled discomfort. However, memory was often impaired: the median factual recollection score of ICU patients was significantly lower than that of matched control patients. The presence of an endotracheal tube, hallucinations and medical activities were most frequently reported as sources of discomfort. Patients with a higher factual recollection score were at greater risk for remembering the stressful presence of an endotracheal tube, medical activities and noise. Younger patients were more likely to report pain as a source of discomfort.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Scatterplot of factual recollection by age in intensive care unit (ICU) patients and the reference group (Control).

References

    1. Rundshagen I, Schnabel K, Wegner , Schulte am Esch J. Incidence of recall, nightmare, and hallucination during analgosedation in intensive care. Intensive Care Medicine. 2002;28:38–43. doi: 10.1007/s00134-001-1168-3.
    1. Holland C, Cason CL, Prater LR. Patients' recollection in critical care. Dimens Crit Care Nurs. 1997;16:132–141.
    1. Rotondi A, Chelluri L, Sirio C, Mendelsohn A, Schulz R, Belle S, Im K, Donahue M, Pinsky Mr. Patients' recollection of stressful experiences while receiving prolonged mechanical ventilation in an intensive care unit. Crit Care Med. 2002;30:746–752. doi: 10.1097/00003246-200204000-00004.
    1. Capuzzo M, Pinamonti A, Cingolani E, Grassi L, Bianconi M, Contu P, Gritti G, Alvisi R. Analgesia, sedation and memory of intensive care. J Crit Care. 2001;16:83–89. doi: 10.1053/jcrc.2001.28789.
    1. Pennock BE, Crawshaw L, Maher T, Price T, Kaplan PD. Distressful events in the ICU as perceived by patients recovering from coronary artery bypass surgery. Heart Lung. 1994;23:323–327.
    1. Turner JS, Briggs SJ, Springhorn HE, Potgieter PD. Patients' recollection of intensive care unit experience. Crit Care Med. 1990;18:966–968.
    1. Jones J, Hoggart B, Withey J, Donaghue K, Ellis BW. What the patients say: a study of reaction to an intensive care unit. Intensive Care Med. 1979;5:89–92.
    1. Knaus WA, Draper EA, Wagner DP, Zimmerman JE. APACHE II: a severity of disease classification system. Crit Care Med. 1985;13:818–829.
    1. Rose D, Roggla M, Behringer W, Roggla G, Frass M. Recollections of ventilated patients after a stay in the intensive care unit [in German] Wien Klin Wochenschr. 1999;111:148–152.
    1. Jones C, Griffiths RD, Humphris G. Disturbed memory and amnesia related to intensive care. Memory. 2000;8:79–94. doi: 10.1080/096582100387632.
    1. Turner JS, Messervy SJ, Davies LA. Recollection of intensive care unit admission in the United Kingdom [letter] Crit Care Med. 1992;20:1363.
    1. Van de Leur JP, Zwaveling JH, Loef BG, Van der Schans CP. Patient recollection of airway suctioning in the ICU: routine versus a minimally invasive procedure. Intensive Care Med. 2003;29:433–436.
    1. Ely EW, Shintani A, Truman B, Speroff T, Gordon SM, Harrell FE, Jr, Inouye SK, Bernard GR, Dittus RS. Delirium as a predictor of mortality in mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit. JAMA. 2004;291:1753–1762. doi: 10.1001/jama.291.14.1753.
    1. Puntillo KA. Dimensions of procedural pain and its analgesic management in critically ill surgical patients. Am J Crit Care. 1994;3:116–122.
    1. Jones C, Griffiths RD, Humphris G, Skirrow PM. Memory, delusions, and the development of acute posttraumatic stress disorder-related symptoms after intensive care. Crit Care Med. 2001;29:573–580. doi: 10.1097/00003246-200103000-00019.
    1. Capuzzo M, Valpondi V, Cingolani E, De Luca S, Gianstefani G, Grassi L, Alvisi R. Application of the Italian version of the Intensive Care Unit Memory tool in the clinical setting. Crit Care. 2004;8:R48–R55. doi: 10.1186/cc2416.
    1. Wegesin D, Jacobs DM, Zubin NR, Ventura PR, Stern Y. Source memory and encoding strategy in normal aging. J Clin Exp Neuropsychol. 2000;22:455–464. doi: 10.1076/1380-3395(200008)22:4;1-0;FT455.
    1. Yokota M, Miyanaga G, Yonemura K, Watanabe H, Nagashima K, Naito K, Yamada S, Arai S, Neufeld RW. Declining of memory functions of normal elderly persons. Psychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2000;54:217–225. doi: 10.1046/j.1440-1819.2000.00662.x.
    1. Kress JP, Gehlbach B, Lacy M, Pliskin N, Pohlman AS, Hall JB. The long-term psychological effects of daily sedative interruption on critically ill patients. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2003;168:1457–1461. doi: 10.1164/rccm.200303-455OC.

Source: PubMed

3
S'abonner