Avoid cultures that often provide misleading, false-positive results:
- Avoid urinalysis & culture from an indwelling foley catheter , unless there is urinary obstruction or recent urological surgery. ๐
- Among intubated patients, avoid checking an endotracheal aspirate unless there is genuine clinical suspicion for pneumonia (e.g., based on hypoxemia and chest radiograph abnormalities). ๐
- What matters is the number of sets that are positive, not the number of bottles.One set of cultures = two bottles (aerobic & anaerobic). Contamination of a blood draw may cause both bottles within a single set to turn positive.
- (A single blood culture showing yeast, or gram-negative bacilli generally does merit treatment).
High-quality supportive care
High-quality supportive care consists of basic, daily management needed for any critically ill patient to prevent or surmount common problems. This isn't particularly flashy or exciting. However, it's essential for every patient passing through the intensive care unit. Minor interventions, when leveraged across thousands of patients, can have a substantial impact.
This chapter provides an overview of issues that commonly arise in the daily practice of critical care. The goal is to rapidly provide a basic foundation of knowledge, especially for folks who don't work full-time in the ICU (e.g., residents rotating through the unit). Links are provided to full chapters on these topics, to provide additional detail as needed.
Medications to avoid in ICU
benzodiazepines, diphenhydramine, zolpidem
- These drugs used to be popular for treatment of insomnia or agitation. However, they promote delirium and should be avoided.
- These medications will temporarily calm agitated patients, thereby appearing to work. However, they ultimately make patients worse by exacerbating their underlying delirium.
- For insomnia: quetiapine, guanfacine.
- For acute agitation: haloperidol, olanzapine, dexmedetomidine.
- For sedation: dexmedetomidine, propofol, possibly quetiapine.
- Status epilepticus.
- Ketamine re-emergence, procedural sedation.
- Patients who are chronically on benzodiazepines as a home medication.
- Palliative sedation.
- Occasional cases of complicated alcohol withdrawal (phenobarbital has largely replaced this indication for benzodiazepines).๐
nephrotoxins ๐
- The kidney is usually the first organ to be damaged by hypoperfusion. Kidney injury correlates strongly with increased mortality. The following medications should therefore be avoided whenever possible.
- NSAIDs should be avoided as a rule in the ICU (due to both nephrotoxicity and risk of GI bleeding). Treatment of pain in critically ill patients is explored further below. ๐ This does not involve NSAIDs. (11979336)
- ACE-inhibitors & angiotensin-receptor blockers (ARBs)
- ACEi/ARB generally shouldn't be initiated for control of blood pressure, except in select situations (e.g. chronic anuric renal failure, SCAPE ๐, or type-I myocardial infarction ๐). For patients on ACEi/ARB solely for hypertension, consider holding these.
- ACEi/ARB should often be continued for patients with heart failure and reduced ejection fraction who are already on these medications chronically.
tramadol
- Tramadol is a weak opioid with a host of side effects (seizures, delirium, serotonin syndrome, hypoglycemia).
- The efficacy of tramadol is erratic, depending on genetic variation and interacting drugs. (23509136)
- Tramadol is sometimes promoted as a โnon-opioidโ but this isn't true. Tramadol is an opioid, it's just a really poor one.
- The only reason to consider using tramadol is if the patient is chronically on tramadol as a home medication. ๐๐
fluoroquinolones
- Over-utilization of fluoroquinolone has caused marked increases in antibiotic resistance. (21996380, 21144988) Meanwhile, problems with C. difficile, MRSA, neuropathy, delirium, and tendinopathy have grown more apparent. ๐ (17884829, 16477553, 16206099, 22921930, 25700059, 26330729, 25423877, 11793615) The FDA consequently issued a series of black box warnings on fluoroquinolones. ๐
- Fluoroquinolones are almost never the best choice for critically ill patients. Previously, fluoroquinolones were frequently used for treatment of pneumonia in patients with penicillin allergy, but newer evidence has shown that 3rd-4th generation cephalosporins are generally fine for such patients. ๐ (21742459)
aminoglycosides
- There is no convincing evidence that double-coverage for gram-negative pathogens is beneficial (even for ventilator-associated pneumonia or pseudomonal infections โ situations where double-coverage would seem most beneficial). ๐ (18091545, 9377880, 24395715, 22763634, 24139926, 23410791)
- A single broad-spectrum beta-lactam is generally adequate. Addition of an aminoglycoside provides little additional coverage, but does increase nephrotoxicity.
DVT prophylaxis
all patients should get DVT prophylaxis unless they have one of the following contraindications:
- (1) Hemorrhage.
- (2) Thrombocytopenia (platelet count
- (3) Planned procedure:
- DVT prophylaxis isn't a significant problem for most ICU procedures, with the exception of lumbar puncture.
- Interventional radiology may prefer to hold DVT prophylaxis; when in doubt this should be clarified with them in advance.
DVT prophylaxis if GFR >30 ml/min
- Enoxaparin is the preferred agent for the following reasons:
- Fewer injections than s.q. unfractionated heparin, limiting patient discomfort.
- Reduced risk of HIT as compared to unfractionated heparin.
- Enoxaparin may be more effective. (23782973)
- Weight
- Weight >120 kg: increase dose to 0.25 mg/kg enoxaparin q12hr. (19272635, 24136071, 27714833)
- Consider this for patients with unusual weight, pregnancy, or borderline renal function.
- Check an anti-factor Xa level four hours after the third dose (target level ~0.3-0.5 IU/ml). ๐
DVT prophylaxis if GFR
- Unfractionated heparin is used here, because it's not cleared by the kidneys.
- Usual dose: 5,000 IU s.q. TID.
- Weight-based dose adjustments:
- For patients weighing
- For patients weighing >120 kg, consider scaling the dose up roughly proportional to the patient's weight.
GI prophylaxis
non-pharmacologic measures
- Always avoid NSAIDs in ICU patients. (11979336)
- Enteral nutrition should be provided whenever possible. ๐
indications for pharmacological GI prophylaxis
- [1] The patient is truly critically ill (e.g., not simply boarding in the ICU).
- -PLUS-
- [2] One of the following:
- Shock.
- Coagulopathy.
- Chronic liver disease.
- Neurocritical care patient (primarily in terms of elevated intracranial pressure).
proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are preferred for GI prophylaxis