Title: Complications of Critical Illness
1Complications of Critical Illness
- Division of Critical Care Medicine
- University of Alberta
2First, do no harm.
3Outline
- Nutritional support in the ICU
- Abdominal compartment syndrome
- DVT/PE in the ICU
- Ventilator associated pneumonia
- Gastric stress ulceration
4Nutritional Support
5Reasons for Support
- Limit catabolism
- Substrate for healing
- Increase survival
6Calculating Metabolic Needs
- Formula Harris-Benedict Equation
- Nitrogen Balance
- Resting Energy Expenditure
7Harris-Benedict Equation
- Estimates Basal Metabolic Rate (BMR)
- Male BMR kcal/day 66.47 13.7 (kg) 5 (cm) -
6.76 (yrs) - Female BMR kcal/day 66.51 9.56 (kg) 1.85
(cm) - 4.68 (yrs) - Total Caloric Requirements equal the B.E.E.
multiplied by the sum of the stress and activity
factors. - Stress plus activity factors range from 1.2 to
over 2. - Factors to add to the BMR
- 25 (mild peritonitis, long bone fracture or
mild/moderate trauma) - 50 (severe infection, MSOD, severe trauma)
- 100 (burn of 40 to 100 TBSA)
8Nitrogen Balance
- Measure/estimate all sources of nitrogen output.
- stool, urine, skin, fistulae, wounds, etc.
- Measure all sources of nitrogen input.
- enteral or parenteral nutrition
9Greenfield 1997
10Calculating Nitrogen Balance
11Problems with Nutritional Parameters
- UUN will be invalid if creatinine clearance is
less than 50. - UUN and prealbumin are not helpful if the patient
has not received goal volumes of feeding
consistently for three to four days prior to the
test.
12Metabolic CartIndirect Calorimetry Theory
- Measures O2 absorbed in lungs
- Assumptions of Fick equation, at steady state O2
absorbed equals O2 consumed. - Metabolic rate in cc of O2 per minute.
- Conversion 5kcal/liter O2.
- 24 hour steady state measurement recommended.
- Theory - start with a formula, tune it up
long-term with the metabolic cart!
13Metabolic Cart - Indirect Calorimetry Results
- RQ or respiratory quotient (CO2 expired/O2
inspired). - 0.6 - 0.7 starvation/underfeeding
- 0.84 - 0.86 desired range/mixed fuel utilization
- 0.9 - 1.0 carbohydrate metabolism
- 1.0 overfeeding/lipogenesis
14Other Clinical Parameters
- Wound healing
- Measured proteins
- Albumin (t½ weeks)
- Prealbumin (t½ days)
- Non-water weight gain
15Enteral vs. Parenteral?
- Use the GI tract whenever possible.
- Contraindications to GI feeds
- large output fistula
- SBO
- severe pancreatitis
- short gut, severe diarrhea, enteritis
- non-functional GI tract
16Starting Estimates
- Determine number of calories needed.
- Determine normal or increased protein needs.
- Determine if contraindication to fats.
- Determine fluid restrictions.
- USE THE GI TRACT IF POSSIBLE!!
17Nutrients
- Fat - essential linolenic, linoleic, arachidonic
acids - 9 kcal/gm
- Protein - essential and branched chain AA in TPN
- 4 kcal/gm - not to be included in calorie
estimates - no glutamine in TPN due to instability
- Carbohydrates - converted to glucose
- 3.4 kcal/gm (4.0 kcal from endogenous source)
- Trace Minerals
- Chromium, copper, zinc, manganese, selenium, iron
- Vitamins
- Thiamine
- Folate
- Vitamin C
18Rules of Thumb TPN
- Want 25 - 35 solution of dextrose.
- Want 4.25 - 6 AA solution.
- normal 0.8 gm/kg/day up to 2.0 gm/kg/day
- Kcal/nitrogen ratio
- normal 3001
- post-op 1501
- trauma/sepsis 1001
- Lipids 10 - 20 at least twice per week.
19TPN vs. Enteral Advantages?
- Many prospective, randomized studies.
- TPN group had much higher infection rates.
- pneumonia, intraabdominal abscess, line sepsis
- Potential Reasons for TPN Failure
- TPN increases blood glucose if not strictly
controlled. - numerous studies now show hyperglycemia increases
mortality and infectious complications. - Does not contain glutamine.
20Why Enteral?
- Preservation of villous architecture
- may prevent translocation
- role of translocation unclear in humans
- good study in BMT patients
- Ability to give glutamine
- major fuel of enterocytes
- major nitrogen transfer agent to viscera
- in catabolic stress may be an essential AA
21Gastric vs. Post-pyloric Feeds
- Route probably not important if patient
tolerating feeds. - If gastric ileus, recent surgery, or need for
frequent procedures where feeds would be stopped
if gastric, post-pyloric may be better.
22Refeeding Syndrome
- In severely malnourished.
- Development of severe electrolyte abnormalities
- phosphorous, potassium, magnesium
- As muscle mass, cell mass, and ATP repleted
- may reach critically low values, cardiac arrest
23Theoretical Advantages of Early Enteral Nutrition
- 1. Ameliorate the stress response,
hypermetabolism, and hypercatabolism. - 2. Provide gut stimulation to prevent atrophy
and the loss of immunologic and barrier functions
of the gut. - 3. Minimize rapid onset of acute malnutrition.
- 4. Decrease LOS and complication rates.
24Energy Requirement in Critical Illness
Different Conditions
25Total Kcal Goals
- 25 - 35 kcal/kg is suitable for most hospitalized
patients and is a good rule of thumb. - 21 kcal/kg is appropriate for obese patients.
- 30 - 40 kcal/kg may be necessary for highly
stressed patients.
26Total Protein Goals
- 1.0 g/kg for healthy individuals.
- 1.2 - 1.5 g/kg for mildly stressed.
- 1.5 - 2.0 severely stressed/multiple trauma/head
injury/burns.
27Lipid Goals
- High calorie, low volume.
- Suggested max calories - no more than 50 of
non-protein Kcal, or lt 1 cal/Kg/hr. - Minimum to prevent essential fatty acid
deficiency is 2 x 500 cc bottles/week. - Diprivan (propofol) 1calorie/ml
28Consequences of Overfeeding
- 1. Azotemia - patients gt 65 years and patients
given gt 2g/kg protein are at risk. - 2. Fat-overload syndrome - recommended maximum
is 1g lipid/kg/d. Infuse IV lipid slowly over 16
- 24 hours. - 3. Hepatic steatosis - patients receiving high
carbohydrate, very low fat TPN are at risk. - 4. Hypercapnia - makes weaning difficult.
- 5. Hyperglycemia - increases risk of infection.
Glucose should not exceed 5 mg/kg/min (4
mg/kg/min for diabetics).
29Consequences of Overfeeding
- 6. Hypertonic dehydration - can be caused by
high-protein formula with inadequate fluid
provision. - 7. Hypertriglyceridemia - propofol, high TPN
lipid loads, and sepsis increase the risk. If
the patient is hypertriglyceridemic, decrease
lipid to an amount to prevent EFAD (500 cc 10
lipid twice weekly) and monitor.
30Consequences of Overfeeding
- 8. Metabolic acidosis - patients receiving low
ratios of energy to nitrogen are at risk.
Acidosis can cause muscle catabolism and
negative nitrogen balance. - 9. Refeeding syndrome - common in malnourished
patients or those held NPO prior to initiation of
feeding. Start feedings conservatively, advance
gradually, and monitor Mg, Ph, and K closely.
31Nutritional Goals
- Feed as soon as hemodynamically stable, after
adequate resuscitation. - No disease state improves with starvation.
- Poor gut perfusion may contraindicate enteral
feeds, but enteral feeds are always preferred
when possible.
32Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
33Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
- Acute increase in intra-abdominal pressure
- Affects renal, pulmonary, and cardiovascular
systems - Decreases ventilation, causes hypoxia, decreased
blood flow to lower extremities, and kidney
failure.
34Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
- Caused by intra-abdominal swelling or hemorrhage.
- Increase in volume of retroperitoneum such as
with pancreatitis also seen. - Even reports of retroperitoneal hemorrhage such
as with pelvic fracture or from anticoagulation.
35Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
- Early recognition and diagnosis vital to prevent
complications. - Distended, tense abdomen first sign
- Bladder pressure confirms elevated pressure and
is easy to perform. - Bladder is direct transmitter of pressure at
volumes of less than 100 cc.
36Bladder Pressure Measurement
- Bladder filled with 50 cc. of sterile saline via
foley and pressure monitor connected to side port
with 18 ga. needle. - Normal pressure up to 10 cm H2O
- Grade I 10-15
- Grade II 15-25
- Grade III 25-35
- Grade IV gt35
37(No Transcript)
38Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
- Grade I-II can be treated with muscle relaxants
as long as clinical situation improves. - Indication for laparotomy with open abdomen
- Grade III and over
- Failure of improvement with conservative measures
39(No Transcript)
40Venous Thromboembolism in ICU
41Importance of DVT Prophylaxis
- Acute DVT/PE prevention
- Valvular Damage
- Symptomatic proximal DVT can be an extension of
distal DVT that was previously asymptomatic. - Significant number of fatal PEs NOT preceded by
symptomatic DVT. - Most preventable cause of hospital associated
death in medical patients?PE.
42Asymptomatic DVT Upon ICU Admission
Patient Population DVT
Surgical ICU 7.5 Harris J Vas Surg 1997 26734-9
Respiratory ICU 10.7 Schonhster Respiration 1998 65173-7
MICU-Resp fail/vent 19 Goldberg Am J Resp CCM 1996 153A94
MICU-Resp fail/vent 6.3 Fraisse Am J Resp CCM 2000 1611109-14
43Natural History of DVT
132 Surgical patients no prophylaxis
70 No DVT (92)
30 DVT (40)
35 Calf with spontaneous lysis (14)
42 Calf only (17)
23 propagation Popliteal/femoral (9)
56 No PE (5)
44 PE (4)
44Incidence of VTEin Major Trauma Without
Prophylaxis
- Lower leg DVT 58, proximal DVT 18
- Vast majority clinically not apparent.
45Autopsy Studies for PE in Critically Ill Patients
PE Autopsy PE Autopsy
Study ICU Setting Present Fatal
Neuhaus 1978 Med/Surg 27 12
Moser 1981 Respiratory 20 0
Pingleton 1981 Medical 23 --
Cullin 1986 Surgical 10 1
Blosser 1998 Medical 7 2
Willemsen 2000 Surgical 8 3
46Thromboembolism Riskin Surgical Patients - No
Prophylaxis
DVT, DVT, PE, PE,
Calf Proximal Clinical Fatal
Low Risk 2 0.4 0.2 lt0.01
Minor Surgery lt 40 no risk factors Minor Surgery lt 40 no risk factors Minor Surgery lt 40 no risk factors Minor Surgery lt 40 no risk factors Minor Surgery lt 40 no risk factors
Moderate Risk 10-20 2-4 1-2 0.1-0.4
Minor surgery risk factors Surgery 40-60 no risk factors Minor surgery risk factors Surgery 40-60 no risk factors Minor surgery risk factors Surgery 40-60 no risk factors Minor surgery risk factors Surgery 40-60 no risk factors Minor surgery risk factors Surgery 40-60 no risk factors
High Risk 20-40 4-8 2-4 0.4-1.0
Surgery gt60, 94 40-60 with additional risk factors (prior VTE, cancer, hypercoagulability) Surgery gt60, 94 40-60 with additional risk factors (prior VTE, cancer, hypercoagulability) Surgery gt60, 94 40-60 with additional risk factors (prior VTE, cancer, hypercoagulability) Surgery gt60, 94 40-60 with additional risk factors (prior VTE, cancer, hypercoagulability) Surgery gt60, 94 40-60 with additional risk factors (prior VTE, cancer, hypercoagulability)
Highest Risk 40-80 10-20 4-10 0.2-5
Surgery with multiple risk factors (age gt 40 yr, cancer, prior VTE) Hip or knee arthroplasty, HFS Major trauma, SCI Surgery with multiple risk factors (age gt 40 yr, cancer, prior VTE) Hip or knee arthroplasty, HFS Major trauma, SCI Surgery with multiple risk factors (age gt 40 yr, cancer, prior VTE) Hip or knee arthroplasty, HFS Major trauma, SCI Surgery with multiple risk factors (age gt 40 yr, cancer, prior VTE) Hip or knee arthroplasty, HFS Major trauma, SCI Surgery with multiple risk factors (age gt 40 yr, cancer, prior VTE) Hip or knee arthroplasty, HFS Major trauma, SCI
47Trauma and Venous Thromboembolism
- Patients recovering from major trauma have
highest risk for developing VTE amongst all
hospitalized patients. - Without prophylaxis, multisystem or major trauma
have a DVT risk exceeding 50. - PE is the third leading cause of death in trauma
patients that survive beyond the first day.
48Significant Risk Factors and Odds Ratios for
Venous Thromboembolism
Risk Factor (Number at Risk) Odds Ratio (95 CI)
Age ? 40y (n178,851) 2.29 (2.07 2.55)
Pelvic fracture (n2707) 2.93 (2.01 4.27)
Lower extremity fracture (n63,508) 3.16 (2.85 3.51)
Spinal cord injury with paralysis (n2852) 3.39 (2.41 4.77)
Head injury (AIS score ? 3) (n52,197) 2.59 (2.31 2.90)
Ventilator days gt 3 (n13,037) 10.62 (9.32 12.11)
Venous injury (n1450) 7.93 (5.83 10.78)
Shock on admission (BPlt90 mm Hg) (n18,510) 1.95 (1.62 2.34)
Major surgical procedure (n73,974) 4.32 (3.91 4.77)
49VTE Prophylaxis
Pharmacologic
Unfractionated heparin
Low molecular weight heparin
Vit K Antagonists
Mechanical
Graduated Compression Stockings
Intermittent Pneumatic Compression Devices
IVC filters
50INJURED PATIENT
- High Risk Factors
- (Odds ratio for VTE 2 3)
- Age ³ 40
- Pelvic fx
- Lower extremity fx
- Shock
- Spinal cord injury
- Head Injury (AIS ³ 3)
- Very High Risk Factors
- (Odds ratio for VTE 4 - 10)
- Major operative procedure
- Venous injury
- Ventilator days gt 3
- 2 or more high risk factors
Does the patient have contraindication for
Heparin?
Does the patient have contraindication for
Heparin?
Yes
No
Yes
No
LMWH and Mechanical Compression
Mechanical Compression and serial CFDI OR
Temporary IVC filter
Mechanical Compression
LMWH
Prophylactic dose
51Patient Assessment
Assess Bleeding Risk
High
Low
- Mechanical Prophylaxis
- Graduated compression stockings (GCS)
- Intermittent pneumatic compression devices (IPC)
- Delayed prophylaxis until high risk bleeding
abates - Screen for proximal DVT with Doppler US in high
risk patients
- Low dose unfractionated heparin (LDUH)
- Low molecular weight heparin (LMWH)
- Combination of LMWH and mechanical prophylaxis
for high risk patients
52Patient Assessment
Bleeding Risk Thrombosis Risk Prophylaxis Recommendation
Low Moderate LDH 5000 units SC bid
Low High LMWH Dalteparin Enoxaparin
High Moderate GCS or IPC ? LDUH when bleeding risk subsides
High High GCS or IPC ? LMWH when bleeding risk subsides
53Vena Caval Filters
- 5 filter types-all equal efficacy
- Pulmonary embolism 2.6-3.8
- Deep Venous Thrombosis 6-32
- Insertion site thrombosis 23-36
- Inferior caval thrombosis 3.6-11.2
- Postphlebitic syndrome 14-41
54Ventilator Associated Pneumonia (VAP)
55VAP Definition
- Infection of the lung that occurs 48 hours or
more after intubation. - Categorized into two groups
- Early onset occurring 48-72 hours after
intubation. - Late onset occurring more than 72 hours after
intubation. - Accounts for 47 of all ICU infections.
56VAP Risk Factors
- Age gt60
- Male
- Traumatic injuries
- Chronic lung disease
- ARDS
- Micro aspiration of oropharyngeal contents
- Continuous sedation
- Paralytics
- Nasogastric tube
- Low endotracheal cuff pressure
- Supine head position
- H2 blockers
- Sinusitis
- Severity of illness
- Duration of ventilation
57VAP Prevention
- Infection control
- Monitoring pneumonia rates and organism
surveillance lower the overall rate. - Strict adherence to hand washing, universal
precautions and barrier precautions for patients
infected or colonized with multidrug-resistant
bacteria prevent spread of VAP. - Noninvasive ventilation
- Allows selected patients to preserve normal
mucociliary defenses.
58VAP Prevention
- Patient positioning
- Lateral rotation of patients while in bed reduces
the risk of aspiration. - Keeping the head of the bed gt30 degrees also
reduces the risk of aspiration. - Endotracheal cuff pressure and suctioning
- A persistent endotracheal intracuff pressure of
lt20 cm H2O allows more micro aspiration. - Continuous subglottic suctioning is used to
remove the pool of secretions that develops
around the endotracheal cuff.
59VAP Prevention
- Healthcare provider education
- Ongoing education of hospital staff that focuses
on semi recumbent positioning, avoidance of
gastric over distention, appropriate use of
sedation, routine oral hygiene, and proper
endotracheal tube and ventilator circuit
management results in a striking decrease in the
incidence of VAP.
60Gastric Stress Ulcers
61Stress Ulcerations - Definition
- Stress ulcerations are mucosal erosions that are
usually shallow and cause oozing from superficial
capillary beds. - Deeper lesions can occur and erode into the
submucosa causing massive hemorrhage or
perforation. - Most common cause of GI bleeding in ICU patients.
62Stress Ulcerations Risk Factors
- There are two major risk factors for clinically
significant bleeding due to stress ulcers
mechanical ventilation more than 48 hours and
coagulopathy. - The risk of clinically important bleeding in
patients without either of these risk factors was
only 0.1. - Burns, renal failure, and head injury are also
minor contributors to the risk of bleeding.
63Stress Ulceration - Prevention
- H2 blockers
- Block the stimulatory effects of histamine on
parietal cells. - Continuous infusion provides better control of
gastric pH over bolus infusion but is not more
protective. - Also effective if given orally or NG.
64Stress Ulceration Prevention
- Proton pump inhibitors
- Mechanism of action is by inactivation of the
H-K-ATPase pump. - At least equally effective as H2 blockers.
- Nutrition
- Several studies have reported that enteral
nutrition reduces the risk of bleeding. - This effect is not seen with TPN.
- If patient is tolerating enteral feeding, then
additional stress ulceration prophylaxis is
unlikely to be needed.
65Stress Ulceration Risk of VAP
- Agents that raise the gastric pH may promote the
growth of bacteria in the stomach. - These organisms then can reflux back up into the
trachea and cause VAP. - The jury is still out on the association between
acid suppression and VAP but caution is warranted.
66Summary
- First, do no harm
- Nutritional support in the ICU
- Abdominal compartment syndrome
- DVT/PE in the ICU
- Ventilator associated pneumonia
- Gastric stress ulceration