Invasive Mechanical Ventilation in PICU has Lasting Neurocognitive Impacts

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Children in paediatric ICUs (PICUs) that undergo invasive mechanical ventilation for acute respiratory failure are left with lasting neurocognitive effects, according to a study published in JAMA.

Little is known about whether children undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation worse long-term neurocognitive function than children who do not undergo such procedures. There are concerns about neurotoxic effects of critical illness and its treatment on the developing brain. Therefore, infants and young children may be uniquely susceptible to adverse neurocognitive outcomes after invasive mechanical ventilation.

Researchers conducted a four-year sibling-matched cohort study conducted at 31 PICUs and associated neuropsychology testing centres. Children who survived PICU hospitalisation for respiratory failure and were discharged without severe cognitive dysfunction were found to have significantly lower subsequent IQ scores than their matched siblings.

“While the difference in IQ scores between patients and unexposed siblings was small, the data provide strong evidence of the existence and epidemiology of paediatric post-intensive care syndrome (PICS-p) after a single typical episode of acute respiratory failure necessitating invasive ventilation among generally healthy children,” said Martha A.Q. Curley, PhD, RN, FAAN, Professor of Nursing at the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing (Penn Nursing) and the study’s lead researcher.

The study reaffirms the importance of assessing long-term outcomes as part of any trial evaluating acute interventions in pediatric critical care. It also underscores the importance of further study to understand which children may be at highest risk, what modifiable factors could cause it, and how it can be prevented.

Source: University of Pennsylvania