Objective: The degree of sedation or agitation in critically ill patients is typically assessed with the Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale (RASS). However, this approach is intermittent and subject to unrecognised variation between assessments. High frequency accelerometry may assist in achieving a quantitative and continuous assessment of sedation while heralding imminent agitation. Design: We undertook a prospective, observational pilot study. Setting: An adult tertiary intensive care unit in Melbourne, Australia. Participants: 20 patients with an admission diagnosis of trauma. Main outcome measures: Accelerometers were applied to patients' wrists and used to continuously record patient movement. Video data of patient behaviour we...
AbstractBackground and objectivesSedative and analgesic treatment administered to critically ill pat...
Background: Sedation is crucial for the recovery of patients in intensive care units (ICUs). Maintai...
Background: The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS), which assesses level of sedation and agita...
Purpose: The aim of this study is to evaluate continuous wrist actigraphy (measurement of limb movem...
Background. Sedation of intensive care patients is needed for patient safety, but deep sedation is a...
Agitation-sedation cycling in ICU patients is characterised by oscillations between states of agitat...
Introduction The critically-ill undergoing inter-hospital transfers commonly receive sedatives in c...
The management of sedation in critically ill patients is a complex issue for Intensive Care Units (I...
Introduction-Aim: Newer methods, such as infrared digital pupillometry and electrodermal activity (E...
Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients are often sedated, yet sedation assessment scales ...
Objective: Daily interruption and monitoring of sedation in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, espe...
Abstract Background The Richmond Agitation-Sedation S...
Background. Excessive sedation is associated with adverse patient outcomes during critical illness, ...
Introduction Sleep is a state of quiescence that facilitates the significant restorative processes t...
Objective: To develop a personalizable algorithm to discriminate between sedation levels in ICU pati...
AbstractBackground and objectivesSedative and analgesic treatment administered to critically ill pat...
Background: Sedation is crucial for the recovery of patients in intensive care units (ICUs). Maintai...
Background: The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS), which assesses level of sedation and agita...
Purpose: The aim of this study is to evaluate continuous wrist actigraphy (measurement of limb movem...
Background. Sedation of intensive care patients is needed for patient safety, but deep sedation is a...
Agitation-sedation cycling in ICU patients is characterised by oscillations between states of agitat...
Introduction The critically-ill undergoing inter-hospital transfers commonly receive sedatives in c...
The management of sedation in critically ill patients is a complex issue for Intensive Care Units (I...
Introduction-Aim: Newer methods, such as infrared digital pupillometry and electrodermal activity (E...
Background: Traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients are often sedated, yet sedation assessment scales ...
Objective: Daily interruption and monitoring of sedation in intensive care unit (ICU) patients, espe...
Abstract Background The Richmond Agitation-Sedation S...
Background. Excessive sedation is associated with adverse patient outcomes during critical illness, ...
Introduction Sleep is a state of quiescence that facilitates the significant restorative processes t...
Objective: To develop a personalizable algorithm to discriminate between sedation levels in ICU pati...
AbstractBackground and objectivesSedative and analgesic treatment administered to critically ill pat...
Background: Sedation is crucial for the recovery of patients in intensive care units (ICUs). Maintai...
Background: The Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS), which assesses level of sedation and agita...