托斯卡纳 USL 中心的卒中单元和神经重症监护单元治疗急性神经系统疾病:普拉托圣斯特凡诺医院的试点模式

Raffaella Valenti, Alba Caruso, Anita E. Scotto Di Luzio, Donatella Accavone, Maria G. Cagliarelli, Guido Chiti, Enrico Grassi, Maria Briccoli Bati, Pasquale Palumbo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

急性神经系统疾病是致残和死亡的主要原因。对管理神经紧急情况的专科神经危重症护理技能的需求有所增加。存在着改善神经系统疾病急性期预后的良好机会,例如,为中风患者设立卒中单元的概念。类似的概念被引入到神经危重症监护室,与更传统的管理相比,这与改善的临床结果有关。然而,神经危重症护理通常不被认为是一个独立的专业。神经病学的重大进展使神经系统危重症患者,特别是中风和出血患者,以及癫痫发作和癫痫状态、创伤性脑损伤(TBI)、硬膜下/硬膜外血肿、急性炎症性多根神经炎、脑炎、重症肌无力、急性脊髓炎等患者有了更好的治疗方法。除脑血管疾病外,对其他急性神经系统疾病,没有公认的标准化模式护理服务。对急性患者选择神经内科环境,包括在神经危重症护理方面受过专门培训的护理人员,可以获得良好的患者预后。由于我们认为应该实施神经危重症护理实践,我们建议根据我们的经验建立一个试点模型。在本报告中,我们展示了Santo Stefano医院(Prato, USL Toscana Centro) 2A设置的模型,除了脑血管事件的中风单元外,我们还有神经危重症护理单元和所有急性神经系统疾病的急性神经病学专家。Santo Stefano医院中风病房/神经危重症监护室的2A设置包括15张病床;8±2张床采用便携式多参数监测装置监测。急性治疗后,除了对所有急性患者进行适当的二级预防、早期康复和预防并发症外,还进行诊断/病因检查和生命功能的自动监测。我们回顾性评估了在2022年1月1日至2022年6月30日期间连续分析的249例患者卒中单元/神经危重症护理(2A)出院表(HDF)中的诊断。249例急性神经系统疾病患者中,脑血管疾病155例(62.2%)。其中,缺血性脑卒中100例(64.5%),出血性脑卒中44例(28.4%)。32例患者(12.8%)在TBI后住院。16例(6.4%)新诊断为癫痫,3例(1.2%)有癫痫状态。在我们的研究中,36例接受重组组织纤溶酶原激活剂(r-TPA)治疗的脑卒中患者的3个月改良Rankin量表(mRS)在60%的病例中为0-2(低残疾)。此外,44例脑出血(ICH)患者中有31%报告了中度至重度残疾。对于TBI患者,mRS评分范围从1到5,卒中单元/神经危重症护理(2A)患者与其他科室患者相比有显著差异(分别为2-3和3-4)。在全球范围内,急性神经系统患者的出院设置为:康复(26%),中间护理医院(44%),长期护理(5%)和家庭(25%)。1个月死亡率为1.8%。我们提供了6个月期间治疗的病例的简要描述,以提请注意病房的存在的可能性,专门用于所有急性神经系统疾病。病人的样本非常多样,也很有趣。超过60%的患者有脑血管疾病。结果数据的缺乏使本报告受到限制,但我们认为,诊断-治疗策略、接受过特定神经危重症护理培训的工作人员的存在以及使用住院病人医院登记是优势。我们在Santo Stefano医院(Prato, USL Toscana Centro)卒中单元/神经危重症护理(2A)设置的试点模型应该进一步实施,也可以系统地验证与中风和其他神经系统急性疾病患者可测量结果改善的关联。
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Stroke unit and Neurocritical Care Unit for acute neurological diseases in the USL Toscana Centro: a pilot model of Santo Stefano Hospital in Prato
Acute neurological diseases are leading causes of disability and death. The need for specialist neurocritical care skills for managing neurological emergencies has increased. Promising opportunities exist to improve outcomes in acute phases of neurological diseases, such as, for example, the concept of a stroke unit for stroke patients. A similar concept was introduced for a neurocritical care unit, which is associated with improved clinical outcomes compared with more traditional management. However, neurocritical care is often not recognized as a separate specialty. Significant progress in neurology has enabled better approaches for the critically ill neurologic patient, in particular those with stroke and hemorrhage, but also with epileptic seizures and epileptic status, traumatic brain injury (TBI), subdural/epidural hematoma, acute inflammatory polyradiculoneuritis, encephalitis, myasthenia gravis, acute myelitis, etc.Except for cerebrovascular diseases, for other acute neurological diseases, there is no standardized model care service recognized. A good patient outcome can be obtained by the choice of neurology setting for acute patients including nursing and medical staff with specific training in neurocritical care. As we believe neurocritical care practices should be implemented, we suggest a pilot model on the basis of our experience. In this report, we show a model of the 2A setting of the Santo Stefano Hospital (Prato, USL Toscana Centro), where, as well as stroke units for cerebrovascular events, we have neurocritical care unit and acute-neurology experts for all acute neurological diseases.The 2A setting of Stroke Unit/Neurocritical Care of the Santo Stefano Hospital includes 15 beds; 8 ± 2 beds are monitored by portable multi-parameter monitoring devices. Following acute treatment, diagnostic/etiologic work-up and automated monitoring of vital functions are performed in addition to adapted secondary prevention, early rehabilitation, and prevention of complications in all acute patients. We retrospectively assessed the diagnoses in the hospital discharge forms (HDF) of Stroke Unit/Neurocritical Care (2A) of 249 patients consecutively analyzed between 1 January 2022 and 30 June 2022. Out of the 249 patients affected by acute neurological diseases, 155 had cerebrovascular diseases (62.2%). In particular, 100 (64.5%) were diagnosed with ischemic stroke and 44 (28.4%) with hemorrhagic stroke. Thirty-two patients (12.8%) were hospitalized following a TBI. Sixteen patients (6.4%) had a new diagnosis of epilepsy and three (1.2%) of epileptic status. In our setting, the 3-month modified Rankin Scale (mRS) in the 36 stroke patients treated with recombinant-tissue plasminogen activator (r-TPA) was 0–2 (low disability) in 60% of cases. Additionally, 31% of 44 intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) patients reported a moderate-severe degree of disability. Regarding TBI patients, the mRS ranged from 1 to 5, with significate difference between patients in Stroke Unit/Neurocritical Care (2A) in comparison with those in other departments (2–3 vs. 3–4, respectively). Globally, the setting discharge of the acute neurological patients were: rehabilitation (26%), intermediate care hospitals (44%), long-term care (5%), and home (25%). The 1-month mortality rate was 1.8%.We provide a brief description of the cases treated over a 6-month period to draw attention to the possibility of the existence of a ward dedicated exclusively and specifically to all acute neurological diseases. The sample of patients is very varied and interesting. More than 60% of patients had cerebrovascular diseases. The paucity of outcome data makes this report limited, but the diagnostic-therapeutic strategies, the presence of staff trained in specific neurocritical care, and the use of inpatient hospital-based registries are, in our opinion, strengths. Our pilot model of the setting of Stroke Unit/Neurocritical Care (2A) in the Santo Stefano Hospital (Prato, USL Toscana Centro) should be further implemented, also to verify systematically the associations with measurable outcome improvements in patients affected by strokes and other neurological acute diseases.
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