Neurologic Implications of Critical Illness and Organ Dysfunction

  • LacKamp A
  • Stevens R
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Abstract

Critical illness has consequences for the nervous system. Patients experiencing critical illness are at risk for common global neurologic disturbances, such as delirium, long-term cognitive dysfunction, ICU-acquired weakness, sleep disturbances, recurrent seizures, and coma. In addition, complications related to specific organ dysfunction may be anticipated. Cardiovascular disease presents the possibility for CNS injury after cardiac arrest, sequelae of endocarditis, aberrancies of blood flow autoregulation, and malperfusion. Respiratory disease is known to cause short-term effects of hypoxia and long-term effects after ARDS. Sepsis encephalopathy and sickness behavior syndrome are early signs of infection in patients. In addition, commonly encountered organ dysfunction including uremia, hepatic failure, endocrine, and metabolic disturbances present with neurologic findings which may manifest in the critically ill patient as well.

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LacKamp, A. N., & Stevens, R. D. (2013). Neurologic Implications of Critical Illness and Organ Dysfunction. In Textbook of Neurointensive Care (pp. 409–425). Springer London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4471-5226-2_21

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