Locations:
Search IconSearch

How to Recognize and Manage Post-ICU Syndrome in Neurological Practice (Podcast)

Watch for physical, psychological and cognitive manifestations

More than 20% of patients released from a medical or surgical ICU experience some cognitive dysfunction — most at the same level as someone with traumatic brain injury and up to 10% at the same level as someone with Alzheimer’s disease.

Advertisement

Cleveland Clinic is a non-profit academic medical center. Advertising on our site helps support our mission. We do not endorse non-Cleveland Clinic products or services. Policy

Post-ICU syndrome, which also manifests with physical and psychiatric symptoms, is an emerging phenomenon being studied by Joao Gomes, MD, Head of the Neurointensive Care Unit in Cleveland Clinic’s Cerebrovascular Center. He discusses the condition in detail in the newest episode of Cleveland Clinic’s peer-to-peer Neuro Pathways podcast.

This episode touches on:

  • How post-ICU syndrome presents and how it can affect a patient’s recovery
  • Whether patients recovering from a brain injury are more susceptible to post-ICU syndrome
  • Cleveland Clinic’s new post-ICU clinic, which will offer telemedicine visits to screen for depression, anxiety, PTSD, cognitive decline and other conditions
  • Why families of patients with post-ICU syndrome may require special attention as well
  • Helping patients recover from memory gaps and delirium with ICU diaries

Click the player below to hear the podcast, or read on for a short edited excerpt. Check out more Neuro Pathways episodes at clevelandclinic.org/neuropodcast or wherever you get your podcasts.

Excerpt from the podcast

Dr. Alex Rae-Grant (podcast host): What is post-ICU syndrome, and how did it come to be recognized?

Dr. Gomes: One has to go back primarily to literature from medical and surgical ICU populations. Some of our colleagues in those units started noticing that patients who survive an episode of sepsis or severe acute respiratory distress syndrome or respiratory failure would go back to their outpatient clinic with a lot of complaints that were not related to the primary reason for admission. They had a lot of anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder, cognitive problems, even physical disability that was not explained by the reason for their admission. That conglomerate of symptoms and signs is what has been labeled as post-ICU syndrome.

Advertisement

Now we’ve recognized manifestations in three big areas. One is physical. Many of these patients have difficulty walking, difficulty with balance. Their stamina is certainly decreased after a major critical care episode.

The second area is psychiatric. The incidence of depression, PTSD and anxiety is quite high — up to 30% of patients admitted to a general medical or surgical ICU experience symptoms that would meet diagnostic criteria for one of these major psychiatric disorders.

The third component is cognitive. There is certainly something going on, whether it is sleep deprivation or just a systemic inflammatory response — perhaps hypoxia in some cases. Some of the medications we use for these definitely lead to cognitive decline and other symptoms.

Advertisement

Related Articles

16-NEU-2800-Kubu-101058161-650×450
What Do Patients Want from DBS for Parkinson’s Disease?

New study advances understanding of patient-defined goals

photo of a man sleeping at a desk, with a podcast icon overlay
March 15, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Diagnosis and Management of Idiopathic Hypersomnia (Podcast)

Testing options and therapies are expanding for this poorly understood sleep disorder

illustration of an alzheimer brain and a packet of sildenafil pills
March 11, 2024/Neurosciences/Research
Sildenafil as an Alzheimer’s Candidate Drug: Further Support From Insurance Database and Mechanistic Studies

Real-world claims data and tissue culture studies set the stage for randomized clinical testing

brain scan showing perimesencephalic subarachnoid hemorrhage
Study Supports Less-Strict Monitoring for Nonaneurysmal Perimesencephalic SAH Without Hydrocephalus

Digital subtraction angiography remains central to assessment of ‘benign’ PMSAH

illustrated brain with the letters "AI" on a computer circuit board
As AI Tools Emerge, Be Proactive and Engaged to Shape Their Development

Cleveland Clinic neuromuscular specialist shares insights on AI in his field and beyond

histology image of a gray matter lesion in a multiple sclerosis brain
Study Suggests Protective Role for Microglia at Borders of Gray Matter Lesions in Progressive MS

Findings challenge dogma that microglia are exclusively destructive regardless of location in brain

series of digital-looking brain icons with a podcast button overlay on top
March 1, 2024/Neurosciences/Podcast
Harnessing the Power of AI in Medicine (Podcast)

Neurology is especially well positioned for opportunities to enhance clinical care and medical training

illustration of a neuron affected by multiple sclerosis
Clinical Trials in Progressive MS: An Assessment of Advances and Remaining Challenges

New review distills insights from studies over the past decade

Ad