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12 - What is the future?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

Valerie Page
Affiliation:
Watford General Hospital
E. Wesley Ely
Affiliation:
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine
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Summary

The facts

As discussed in Chapter 1, Engel and Romano bemoaned in 1959 that the clinician fails to recognize delirium and is more concerned to ‘protect the functional integrity of the heart, liver and kidneys of his patient but has not learnt to have similar regard for the functional integrity of the brain’.

What we do know

Delirium in ICU is a condition that develops overall in approximately one in three patients; and in two of three patients needing mechanical ventilation.

ICU delirium is frequently missed and its duration is linked to an increasing risk of mortality. It is associated with significantly worse outcomes including long-term cognitive impairment.

Some cases are preventable.

What we don't know

Many things… we have more questions than answers and probably will have for some time to come. Some questions are listed in Table 12.1.

Education

Screening for delirium should be a routine fact of ICU life, such as measuring urine output! The brain is the most important organ in the body. It is the one organ everyone wants intact on discharge. Education is required to ensure this happens, and education takes time.

The fact that this has not been taken into account before does not make it unimportant now. Consider how important the immune system is in sepsis and that the intact brain modulates the immune system. As we learn more we'll put more pieces together – this is the beginning.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

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References

www.europeandeliriumassociation.com.
www.icudelirium.org.

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