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A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT OF CRITICALLY ILL

https://doi.org/10.17802/2306-1278-2019-8-2-116-124

Abstract

The study of long-term treatment outcomes of patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) is necessary for the rapid recovery of a critically ill patient. Training of ICU staff in basic rehabilitation techniques for early rehabilitation and resocialization of patients allows promoting improvements in postresuscitation immunosuppression, polyneuropathy, polymyopathy, and cognitive dysfunction. The introduction of rehabilitation in the ICU enables avoiding the concept of syndrome-treatment of critically ill patients, solving the problem of “a chronic ICU patient”, reducing the number of complications of the underlying disease and chronic pathologies associated with the patient's critical condition. The algorithms for the recovery of critically ill patients are proposed to be introduced from the first day of the hospitalization, when the first pathophysiological recovery patterns begin to form. The role of resocialization in the framework of this approach to the rehabilitation of critically ill patients, the “open ICU” model and deontological aspects of the communication between medical staff and an ICU patient are put forward. The prevention of delirium after cardiac arrest contributes greatly to the further prevention of post-resuscitation cognitive dysfunction, decreases depression and prevents oversedation. A new phenotype of a chronic critically ill patient, the “patient after a critical condition,” is introduced with the discussion of the pathophysiological patterns involved in its formation. The relevance of this review is confirmed by the growing interest to the integration between ICU staff and patient`s family, thus emerging the role of social aspect of the rehabilitation in critically ill patients. The novelty of this research is imposed by advanced approaches to the early rehabilitation of ICU survivors which are currently neglected from the routine ICU practice.

About the Authors

E. V. Grigoryev
Federal State Budgetary Institution “Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases” ; A.V. Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery
Russian Federation

MD, PhD, Professor of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Deputy Director for Research and Clinical Issues;  Chairman of the Department of Intensive Care, 

6, Sosnoviy Blvd., Kemerovo,  650002; 27, Bolshaya Serpuhovskaya St., Moscow, 117997



A. A. Mikhailova
Federal State Budgetary Educational Institution of Higher Education “Kemerovo State Medical University” of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation
Russian Federation

student,

22a, Voroshilova St., Kemerovo,  650029



D. L. Shukevich
Federal State Budgetary Institution “Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases” ; Federal State Budgetary Educational Institution of Higher Education “Kemerovo State Medical University” of the Ministry of Healthcare of the Russian Federation
Russian Federation

 MD, PhD, Head of the Laboratory of Critical Conditions; Professor at the Department of Intensive Care, 

6, Sosnoviy Blvd., Kemerovo,  650002; 22a, Voroshilova St., Kemerovo,  650029



G. P. Plotnikov
A.V. Vishnevsky Institute of Surgery
Russian Federation

MD, PhD, Head of the ICU Department,

27, Bolshaya Serpuhovskaya St., Moscow, 117997



A. S. Radivilko
Federal State Budgetary Institution “Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases”
Russian Federation

MD, PhD, senior researcher at the Laboratory of Critical Conditions,

6, Sosnoviy Blvd., Kemerovo, 650002



V. G. Matveeva
Federal State Budgetary Institution “Research Institute for Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases”
Russian Federation

PhD, senior researcher at the Laboratory of Cell Technologies,

6, Sosnoviy Blvd., Kemerovo,  650002



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Review

For citations:


Grigoryev E.V., Mikhailova A.A., Shukevich D.L., Plotnikov G.P., Radivilko A.S., Matveeva V.G. A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO THE MANAGEMENT OF CRITICALLY ILL. Complex Issues of Cardiovascular Diseases. 2019;8(2):116-124. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.17802/2306-1278-2019-8-2-116-124

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