PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

PTSD common in ICU survivors

Nearly one-quarter of intensive care unit survivors have post-traumatic stress disorder; diaries could be successful prevention tool

2015-04-20
(Press-News.org) Fast Facts

Research finds that one-quarter of patients who survive a critical illness and an ICU stay experience PTSD. Researchers are looking into using ICU diaries as a promising therapeutic tool to prevent PTSD in ICU survivors. Existing psychological problems, large amounts of sedation and reports of frightening ICU memories appear to contribute to the increased risk of PTSD in ICU survivors.

Post-traumatic stress disorder is often thought of as a symptom of warfare, major catastrophes and assault. It's rarely considered in patients who survive a critical illness and stay in the intensive care unit (ICU). However, in a recent Johns Hopkins study, researchers found that nearly one-quarter of ICU survivors suffer from PTSD. They also identified possible triggers for PTSD and indicated a potential preventive strategy: having patients keep ICU diaries. The findings will be published in the May issue of Critical Care Medicine.

­­"PTSD can drastically impact a person's ability to communicate and connect with others, truly interrupting their lives and preventing experiences of joy," says Joe Bienvenu, M.D., associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "This is why our findings are important and why it's so critical that we continue to research ways to prevent PTSD."

Similar research was done in years past, but there was much less data at that time. "We now have a larger data set to review and learn from," says Ann Parker, a fellow in the Johns Hopkins Medicine Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine. "These data could help us develop better prevention methods for ICU-induced PTSD."

Through a systematic literature review, the research team looked at 40 studies of 36 unique patient cohorts with a total of more than 3,000 patients who survived a critical illness and ICU stay. The researchers excluded patients who had suffered a trauma, such as a car crash, or brain injury, because those patients' cognitive and psychological outcomes can be affected by the injury itself, rather than the critical illness/ICU stay. They found that the prevalence of PTSD in the studies ranged from 10 to 60 percent.

To pinpoint a more definitive estimate of PTSD prevalence, the researchers conducted a meta-analysis of a subset of the 40 studies. They selected six studies, with a total of about 450 patients, that used a PTSD measurement tool called the Impact of Event Scale between one and six months after ICU discharge. From these data, they found that one in four patients had symptoms of PTSD. The researchers repeated the same meta-analysis for studies that looked at patients seven to 12 months after an ICU stay and found that one in five patients had PTSD. "These rates are as high as you might see in combat soldiers or rape victims," says Dale Needham, M.D., a professor of medicine and of physical medicine and rehabilitation at Johns Hopkins. "Our clinicians and patients should know that the high risk of PTSD exists among patients surviving critical illness."

Common risk factors for PTSD included being diagnosed with a psychological problem, such as anxiety or depression, before coming to the ICU, the researchers found. Another risk factor was receiving large amounts of sedation medication while in the ICU. Additionally, patients that reported having frightening memories of being in the ICU have a higher risk of PTSD.

These symptoms occur across a wide variety of patients, regardless of their age, diagnosis, severity of illness or length of stay. "This tells us that if we focus on factors traditionally associated with worse physical outcomes, such as a patient's age, we may miss individuals with psychiatric symptoms," says Bienvenu.

The researchers also looked at the best ways to prevent PTSD. The solution that seemed most effective was an ICU diary, a notebook that allows clinicians and family members to write daily messages about what is happening to the patient.

"Diaries seem to help patients process their experience and formulate more accurate memories of their time in the ICU. They provide patients with a tool to better understand their experience in the ICU through the words of their loved ones and caregivers," says Bienvenu.

At The Johns Hopkins Hospital, the medical ICU team will be rolling out a quality improvement project that will include using an ICU diary as a tool to prevent PTSD and improve recovery. Relatively few institutions in the U.S. use ICU diaries, but they're commonly employed in Europe. Johns Hopkins plans to use them for patients entering the medical ICU and will further evaluate their effectiveness as a therapeutic tool.

With more than 5 million people annually requiring ICU-level care in the United States and more than 750,000 Americans needing mechanical ventilators, "it's clear that those who care for ICU patients need to be aware that there could be long-term consequences of critical illness and lifesaving treatments, including PTSD, which can significantly limit a patient's quality of life well after discharge," says Parker.

The field of critical care medicine is getting better at saving lives, but there's now an ever-growing group of ICU survivors. "To ensure that these patients have the best possible quality of life, we have to look at what their lives are like after they leave the ICU," says Needham.

For years Needham and his colleagues have studied what happens to patients after they leave the ICU. "Our previous research looked at patients one to five years after surviving a critical illness in the ICU," he says. "We analyzed the physical, cognitive and psychological effects of their critical illness/ICU care and uncovered an array of challenges that are clinically referred to as post-intensive care syndrome." PTSD is just one aspect of post-intensive care syndrome, he says.

From Needham's initial research, his team, led by Parker, was driven to look deeper into the prevalence, risk factors and prevention strategies for PTSD in critical illness survivors, which led them to their current Critical Care Medicine study.

INFORMATION:

Additional researchers on the study included Thiti Sricharoenchai, Sandeep Raparla and Kyle W. Schneck.

This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health from grant numbers T32HL007534-31 and 1KL2TR001077.

Johns Hopkins Medicine
Media Relations and Public Affairs Media contacts: Marin Hedin, (410) 502-9429, mhedin2@jhmi.edu,
Helen Jones, (410) 502-9422, hjones49@jhmi.edu



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Providing universal donor plasma to massively bleeding trauma patients

2015-04-20
A recent randomized trial that looked at the feasibility of 2013 guidelines issued by the American College of Surgeons Trauma Quality Improvement Project for trauma resuscitation found that delivering universal donor plasma to massively hemorrhaging patients can be accomplished consistently and rapidly and without excessive wastage in high volume trauma centers. The plasma is given in addition to red blood cell transfusions to optimize treatment. The 2013 guidelines recommend that universal donor products be immediately available on arrival of severely injured patients, ...

Study sheds new light on a crucial enzyme for the immune response

2015-04-20
Montréal, April 20, 2014 - A new study by immunology researchers at the IRCM led by Javier M. Di Noia, PhD, sheds light on a mechanism affecting AID, a crucial enzyme for the immune response. The scientific breakthrough, published in the latest issue of The Journal of Experimental Medicine, could eventually improve the way we treat the common flu, as well as lymphoma and leukemia. The researchers study white blood cells, called B-lymphocytes, whose main function is to produce antibodies to fight against infections. More specifically, they focus on an enzyme found ...

Atrial fibrillation recurrence lower with sleep apnea treatment

2015-04-20
WASHINGTON (April 20, 2015) - The use of continuous positive airway pressure was associated with a significant reduction in the recurrence of atrial fibrillation in patients with obstructive sleep apnea, according to an analysis of data from past research published today in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology: Clinical Electrophysiology. Researchers from the New York University Langone Medical Center in New York City performed a meta-analysis of seven studies including 1,087 patients to determine if continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) reduced the ...

Necessity at the roots of innovation: The scramble for nutrients intensifies as soils age

Necessity at the roots of innovation: The scramble for nutrients intensifies as soils age
2015-04-20
Confronted by extreme scarcity of nutrients in an Australian dune ecosystem, the leaves of different plant species converge on a single efficient strategy to conserve phosphorus, an essential nutrient. But it is a different story underground, say researchers, including Ben Turner, staff scientist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. Plants on older dunes draw from a full bag of tricks, and take advantage of nearly all of the known adaptations for acquiring nutrients to capture the phosphorus they need. "Plants cope with phosphorus scarcity in a similar way above-ground ...

Two recent Notre Dame papers shed light on how breast cancer cells avoid death

2015-04-20
Two new papers from the lab of Zach Schafer, Coleman Assistant Professor of Cancer Biology at the University of Notre Dame, offer insights into how breast cancer cells avoid anoikis, which is cell death induced by detachment from the extracellular matrix (ECM). "Metastasis, the spread of cancer cells from the primary tumor site to distant sites in the body, is responsible for in excess of 90 percent of cancer deaths," Schafer said. "In order for cancer cells to metastasize, they must survive the trip from the primary tumor to a secondary site. A significant barrier to ...

Oral milk thistle extract stops colorectal cancer stem cells from growing tumors

2015-04-20
In results presented at the American Association for Cancer Research (AACR) Annual Meeting 2015, a University of Colorado Cancer Center study shows that orally administering the chemical silibinin, purified from milk thistle, slows the ability of colorectal cancer stem cells to grow the disease. When stem cells from tumors grown in silibinin-fed conditions were re-injected into new models, the cells failed to develop equally aggressive tumors even in the absence of silibinin. "It's very simple: tumors from mice that were initially fed silibinin had fewer cancer stem cells, ...

New drug combination shows promise for breaking breast cancer resistance

New drug combination shows promise for breaking breast cancer resistance
2015-04-20
Researchers from The University of Manchester working with drug development company Evgen Pharma, have developed a new combination of drugs which could overcome treatment resistance and relapse in breast cancer. In research to be revealed at the American Association of Cancer Research annual conference on Monday, the researchers show that in the most common type of breast cancer, affecting 70% of patients, the drug Sulforadex helps overcome resistance to routinely used hormonal treatments by targeting the cancer stem cell population. While most women initially respond ...

Dartmouth-led black hole hunters tackle a cosmic conundrum

Dartmouth-led black hole hunters tackle a cosmic conundrum
2015-04-20
HANOVER, N.H. - Dartmouth astrophysicists and their colleagues have not only proven that a supermassive black hole exists in a place where it isn't supposed to be, but in doing so have opened a new door to what things were like in the early universe. Henize 2-10 is a small irregular galaxy that is not too far away in astronomical terms -- 30 million light-years. "This is a dwarf starburst galaxy -- a small galaxy with regions of very rapid star formation -- about 10 percent of the size of our own Milky Way," says co-author Ryan Hickox, an assistant professor in Dartmouth's ...

Darwin convinced the world, but was he the first to describe evolution?

2015-04-20
A new review of the ideas and work of Patrick Matthew, a little-known antecedent of Charles Darwin, argues that Matthew is under-appreciated even though he described the idea of large-scale evolution by natural selection decades before Darwin did. Some of his ideas were different from Darwin's but are equally valid. "Patrick Matthew was a fascinating character--strong-willed and fiercely independent," said Dr. Michael Weale, author of the Biological Journal of the Linnean Society article. "Darwin used detailed, methodical force of argument to convince the world of evolution ...

Expert offers advice on how to 'pitch' a good research idea

2015-04-20
For many students or junior academics--and even for senior investigators--initiating a new piece of research can be a daunting experience, and they often do not know where or how to begin. A recent Accounting and Finance article offers a simple new research tool that can act as a template designed for pitching research ideas to mentors or other experts. The two-page pitching template includes 4 preliminary components: working title, research question, key papers, and motivation. Next is a '3-2-1 countdown' that is based on 3 elements - idea, data, and tools; 2 questions ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

McCombs announces 2024 Hall of Fame inductees and rising stars

Stalling a disease that could annihilate banana production is a high-return investment in Colombia

Measurements from ‘lost’ Seaglider offer new insights into Antarctic ice melting

Grant to support new research to address alcohol-related partner violence among sexual minorities

Biodiversity change amidst disappearing human traditions

New approaches to synthesize compounds for pharmaceutical research

Cohesion through resilient democratic communities

UC Santa Cruz chemists discover new process to make biodiesel production easier, less energy intensive

MD Anderson launches Institute for Cell Therapy Discovery & Innovation to deliver transformational new therapies

New quantum encoding methods slash circuit complexity in machine learning

New research promises an unprecedented look at how psychosocial stress affects military service members’ heart health

Faster measurement of response to antibiotic treatment in sepsis patients using Dimeric HNL

Cleveland Clinic announces updated findings in preventive breast cancer vaccine study

Intergenerational effects of adversity on mind-body health: Pathways through the gut-brain axis

Watch this elephant turn a hose into a sophisticated showering tool

Chimpanzees perform better on challenging computer tasks when they have an audience

New medical AI tool identifies more cases of long COVID from patient health records

Heat waves and adverse health events among dually eligible individuals 65 years and older

Catastrophic health expenditures for in-state and out-of-state abortion care

State divorce laws, reproductive care policies, and pregnancy-associated homicide rates

Emerging roles of high-mobility group box-1 in liver disease

Exploring the systematic anticancer mechanism in selected medicinal plants

University of Cincinnati researchers pen editorial analyzing present, future of emergency consent in stroke trials

Scarlet Macaw parents ‘play favorites,’ purposefully neglect younger chicks

One gene provides diagnoses for 30 patients whose condition was unexplained for years

Current practice and emerging endoscopic technology in the diagnosis of colorectal cancer

Decoding 17-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase 13: A multifaceted perspective on its role in hepatic steatosis and associated disorders

Key pathway leading to neurodegeneration in early stages of ALS identified

Ferroptosis in regulating treatment tolerance of digestive system tumors

A promising future in pancreatic incidentaloma detection

[Press-News.org] PTSD common in ICU survivors
Nearly one-quarter of intensive care unit survivors have post-traumatic stress disorder; diaries could be successful prevention tool