Delirium, a complication not currently monitored in the ICU setting, is extremely common in mechanically ventilated patients. The CAM-ICU appears to be rapid, valid, and reliable for diagnosing delirium in the ICU setting and may be a useful instrument for both clinical and research purposes.
Objective
To test the hypothesis that duration of delirium in the intensive care unit (ICU) is an independent predictor of long-term cognitive impairment after critical illness requiring mechanical ventilation.
Design
Prospective cohort study.
Setting
Medical ICU in a large community hospital in the United States.
Patients
Mechanically ventilated medical ICU patients who were assessed daily for delirium while in the ICU and underwent comprehensive cognitive assessments 3 and 12 months after discharge.
Measurements and Main Results
Of 126 eligible patients, 99 survived ≥3 months post-critical illness; long-term cognitive outcomes were obtained for 77 (78%) patients. Median age was 61 years, 51% were admitted with sepsis/ARDS, and median duration of delirium was 2 days. At 3-and 12-month follow-up, 79% and 71% of survivors had cognitive impairment, respectively (with 62% and 36% being severely impaired). After adjusting for age, education, preexisting cognitive function, severity of illness, severe sepsis, and exposure to sedative medications in the ICU, increasing duration of delirium was an independent predictor of worse cognitive performance—determined by averaging age- and education-adjusted T-scores from nine tests measuring seven domains of cognition—at 3-month (p = 0.02) and 12-month follow-up (p = 0.03). Duration of mechanical ventilation, alternatively, was not associated with long-term cognitive impairment (p = 0.20 and 0.58).
Conclusions
In this study of mechanically ventilated medical ICU patients, duration of delirium was independently associated with long-term cognitive outcomes, representing a potentially modifiable predictor of this common public health problem.
Clinical characteristics might be associated with temporomandibular disorders (TMD) because they are antecedent risk factors that increase the likelihood of a healthy person developing the condition or because they represent signs or symptoms of either subclinical or overt TMD. In this baseline case-control study of the multisite Orofacial Pain: Prospective Evaluation and Risk Assessment (OPPERA) project, 1,633 controls and 185 cases with chronic, painful TMD completed questionnaires and received clinical examinations. Odds ratios measuring association between each clinical factor and TMD were computed, with adjustment for study-site as well as age, sex, and race/ethnicity. Compared to controls, TMD cases reported more trauma, greater parafunction, more headaches and other pain disorders, more functional limitation in using the jaw, more nonpain symptoms in the facial area, more temporomandibular joint noises and jaw locking, more neural or sensory medical conditions, and worse overall medical status. They also exhibited on examination reduced jaw mobility, more joint noises, and a greater number of painful masticatory, cervical, and body muscles upon palpation. The results indicated that TMD cases differ substantially from controls across almost all variables assessed. Future analyses of follow-up data will determine whether these clinical characteristics predict increased risk for developing first-onset pain-related TMD
Perspective
Clinical findings from OPPERA’s baseline case-control study indicate significant differences between chronic TMD cases and controls with respect to trauma history, parafunction, other pain disorders, health status, and clinical examination data. Future analyses will examine their contribution to TMD onset.
Prolonged neuropsychological impairment is common among survivors of the medical intensive care unit and occurs with greater than anticipated frequency when compared with relevant normative data. Future investigations are warranted to elucidate the nature of the association between critical illness, neuropsychological impairment, depression, and decreased quality of life.
Most healthcare professionals consider delirium in the intensive care unit a common and serious problem, although few actually monitor for this condition and most admit that it is underdiagnosed. Data from this survey point to a disconnect between the perceived significance of delirium in the intensive care unit and current practices of monitoring and treatment.
Streptococci and actinomyces that initiate colonization of the tooth surface frequently coaggregate with each other as well as with other oral bacteria. These observations have led to the hypothesis that interbacterial adhesion influences spatiotemporal development of plaque. To assess the role of such interactions in oral biofilm formation in vivo, antibodies directed against bacterial surface components that mediate coaggregation interactions were used as direct immunofluorescent probes in conjunction with laser confocal microscopy to determine the distribution and spatial arrangement of bacteria within intact human plaque formed on retrievable enamel chips. In intrageneric coaggregation, streptococci such as Streptococcus gordonii DL1 recognize receptor polysaccharides (RPS) borne on other streptococci such as Streptococcus oralis 34. To define potentially interactive subsets of streptococci in the developing plaque, an antibody against RPS (anti-RPS) was used together with an antibody against S. gordonii DL1 (anti-DL1). These antibodies reacted primarily with single cells in 4-h-old plaque and with mixed-species microcolonies in 8-h-old plaque. Anti-RPS-reactive bacteria frequently formed microcolonies with anti-DL1-reactive bacteria and with other bacteria distinguished by general nucleic acid stains. In intergeneric coaggregation between streptococci and actinomyces, type 2 fimbriae of actinomyces recognize RPS on the streptococci. Cells reactive with antibody against type 2 fimbriae of Actinomyces naeslundii T14V (anti-type-2) were much less frequent than either subset of streptococci. However, bacteria reactive with anti-type-2 were seen in intimate association with anti-RPS-reactive cells. These results are the first direct demonstration of coaggregation-mediated interactions during initial plaque accumulation in vivo. Further, these results demonstrate the spatiotemporal development and prevalence of mixed-species communities in early dental plaque.The human oral cavity harbors a complex microbial ecosystem characterized by spatiotemporal variability in species composition. Despite this variability, consensus exists that supra-and subgingival dental plaques develop according to reproducible patterns. Analyses of species composition in supragingival dental plaque have shown that the majority (47 to 90%) of cultivable bacteria are Streptococcus sanguinis (formerly S. sanguis [31]), Streptococcus oralis, and Streptococcus mitis (biovar 1) (24) and that one-third of the remaining bacteria are Actinomyces naeslundii (25). Scanning electron microscopy has shown isolated cells and clusters of cells after 4 h of accumulation, larger "microcolonies" after 8 h, and confluent monolayers after 12 h (22). Transmission electron microscopy has shown that some colonies consisted of gram-negative cells together with gram-positive cells; thus, multispecies colonies were unambiguously identifiable by 24 h (23). These and similar studies together form the basis for present understanding of community evolution in early sup...
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