Abstract

With advances in critical care, patients who would have succumbed in previous eras now survive through hospital discharge. Many survivors suffer from chronic organ dysfunction and induced frailty, representing an emerging chronic critical illness (CCI) phenotype. Persistent and worsening cardiovascular and renal disease are primary drivers of the CCI phenotype and have pathophysiologic synergy, potentiating one another and generating a downward spiral of worsening disease and clinical outcomes manifest as cardio-renal syndromes. In addition to pharmacologic therapies (e.g., diuretics, beta adrenergic receptor blockers, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, angiotensin II receptor blockers, and blood pressure control), special consideration should be given to behavioral modifications that avoid the pitfalls of polypharmacy and suboptimal renal and hepatic dosing, to which CCI patients may be particularly vulnerable. Smoking cessation, dietary modifications (e.g., early high-protein nutrition and late low-sodium diets), and increased physical activity are advised. Select patients benefit from cardiac re-synchronization therapy or renal replacement therapy. Coordinated, patient-centered care bundles may improve compliance with standards of care and patient outcomes. Given the complex, heterogeneous nature of cardiovascular and renal disease in CCI and the dismal long-term outcomes, further research is needed to clarify pathophysiologic mechanisms of cardio-renal syndromes in CCI and develop targeted therapies.

Highlights

  • Advances in critical care diagnostics, treatments, and organizational structures have decreased intensive care unit (ICU) and in-hospital mortality, despite increasing illness severity [1,2,3,4]

  • Many of these survivors suffer from chronic organ dysfunction and induced frailty, representing an emerging chronic critical illness (CCI) phenotype with poor long-term outcomes and increased healthcare resource use [5,6]

  • The onset of CCI can be conceptualized as the point at which patient demographics and chronic disease burden become the strongest predictors of clinical outcomes

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Summary

Introduction

Advances in critical care diagnostics, treatments, and organizational structures have decreased intensive care unit (ICU) and in-hospital mortality, despite increasing illness severity [1,2,3,4]. Patients with multiple organ failure and long ICU stays, who would have succumbed to illness in previous eras, survive through hospital discharge. Many of these survivors suffer from chronic organ dysfunction and induced frailty, representing an emerging chronic critical illness (CCI) phenotype with poor long-term outcomes and increased healthcare resource use [5,6]. Persistent and worsening cardiovascular and renal disease are primary drivers of the CCI phenotype [7,8]. Identification and optimal treatment of cardiovascular and renal disease can optimize patient outcomes and resource use among ICU and CCI patients.

Definitions and Epidemiology of Chronic Critical Illness
Cardiovascular Disease
Renal Disease
Associations between Renal and Cardiovascular Disease
Pathophysiology
Predicting Cardiovascular and Renal Disease in Chronic Critical Illness
Therapeutic Interventions for Cardiovascular and Renal Disease in Chronic
Behavioral and Lifestyle Interventions
Pharmacologic Interventions
Procedural Interventions
Treatment Paradigms
Findings
Conclusions further episodes
Full Text
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