Admission Criteria To ICU

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ADMISSION CRITERIA TO ICU

The Intensive Care Unit is an expensive resource area and should be reserved for patients with reversible medical conditions with a reasonable prospect of substantial recovery .

Patients with the following conditions are candidates for admission to the General Intensive Care Unit. The following conditions include, but are not limited to

A- Respiratory

1- Acute respiratory failure requiring ventilatory support

2- Acute pulmonary embolism with haemodynamic instability

3- Massive haemoptysis

4- Upper airway obstruction


B- Cardiovascular

1- Shock states ( ex. Cardiogenic shock )

2- Life-threatening dysrhythmias

3- Dissecting aortic aneurysms

4- Hypertensive emergencies

5- Need for continuous invasive monitoring of cardiovascular system

( arterial pressure, central venous pressure, cardiac output)

6- Acute myocardial infarction with complications

7-Unstable angina, particularly with dysrhythmias, hemodynamic instability, or persistent chest pain

8- Acute congestive heart failure with respiratory failure and/or requiring hemodynamic support

9- Cardiac tamponade or constriction with hemodynamic instability


C- Neurological

1- Severe head trauma

2- Status epilepticus

3- Meningitis with altered mental status or respiratory compromise

4- Acutely altered sensorium with the potential for airway compromise

5- Progressive neuromuscular dysfunction requiring respiratory support and / or cardiovascular monitoring (myasthenia gravis, Gullain-Barre syndrome)

6- Brain dead or potentially brain dead patients who are being aggressively managed while determining organ donation status

7- Coma: metabolic, toxic, or anoxic

8- Intracranial hemorrhage with potential for herniation

9- Acute subarachnoid hemorrhage


D- Renal

1- Requirement for acute renal replacement therapies in an unstable patient

2- Acute rhabdomyolysis with renal insufficiency


E- Endocrine

1- Diabetic ketoacidosis complicated by haemodynamic instability, altered mental status

2- Severe metabolic acidotic states

3- Thyroid storm or myxedema coma with haemodynamic instability

4- Hyperosmolar state with coma and/or haemodynamic instability

5- Adrenal crises with haemodynamic instability

6- Other severe electrolyte abnormalities, such as:

- Hypo or hyperkalemia with dysrhythmias or muscular weakness

- Severe hypo or hypernatremia with seizures, altered mental status

- Severe hypercalcemia with altered mental status, requiring haemodynamic monitoring

-Hypo or hypermagnesemia with hemodynamic compromise or dysrhythmias

-Hypophosphatemia with muscular weakness


F- Gastrointestinal

1- Life threatening gastrointestinal bleeding including hypotension, angina or continued bleeding

2- Acute hepatic failure leading to coma, haemodynamic instability (Fulminant hepatic failure )

3- Severe acute pancreatitis

4- Esophageal perforation with or without mediastinitis


G- Haematology

1- Severe coagulopathy and/or bleeding diasthesis

2- Severe anemia resulting in haemodynamic and/or respiratory compromise

3- Severe complications of sickle cell crisis

4- Haematological malignancies with multi-organ failure


H-Obstetric

1- Medical conditions complicating pregnancy

2- Severe pregnancy induced hypertension/eclampsia

3- Obstetric haemorrhage

4- Amniotic fluid embolism


I- Multi-system

1- Severe sepsis or septic shock

2- Multi-organ dysfunction syndrome

3- Polytrauma

4- Dengue haemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome

5- Drug overdose with potential acute decompensation of major organ systems

( Hemodynamically unstable drug ingestion, Seizures following drug ingestion, Drug ingestion with significantly altered mental status with inadequate airway protection )

6- Environmental injuries (lightning, near drowning, hypo/hyperthermia)

7- Severe burns


J- Surgical

1- High risk patients in the peri-operative period

2- Post-operative patients requiring continuous haemodynamic monitoring/ ventilatory support, usually following:

- vascular surgery

- thoracic surgery

- airway surgery

- craniofacial surgery

- major orthopaedic and spine surgery

- general surgery with major blood loss/ fluid shift

- neurosurgical procedures


Objective Parameters


Vital Signs

* Pulse < 40 or > 150 beats/minute

* Systolic arterial pressure < 80 mm Hg or 20 mm Hg below the patient's usual pressure

* Mean arterial pressure < 60 mm Hg

* Diastolic arterial pressure > 120 mm Hg

* Respiratory rate > 35 breaths/minute

* SaO2< 88% with O2 supply


Laboratory Values

* Serum sodium < 110 mEq/L or > 160 mEq/L

* Serum potassium < 2.5 mEq/L or > 7.0 mEq/L

* PaO2 < 50 mm Hg

* pH < 7.1 or > 7.7

* Serum glucose > 600 mg/dl

* Serum calcium > 15 mg/dl

* Toxic level of drug or other chemical substance in a hemodynamically or neurologically compromised patient


Radiography/Ultrasonography/Tomography

* Cerebral vascular hemorrhage, contusion or subarachnoid hemorrhage with altered mental status or focal neurological signs

* Ruptured viscera, bladder, liver, esophageal varices or uterus with hemodynamic instability

* Dissecting aortic aneurysm


Electrocardiogram

* Myocardial infarction with complex arrhythmias, hemodynamic instability or congestive heart failure

* Sustained ventricular tachycardia or ventricular fibrillation

* Complete heart block with hemodynamic instability

Physical Findings

* Unequal pupils in an unconscious patient

* Burns covering > 10% BSA

* Anuria

* Airway obstruction

* Coma

* Continuous seizures

* Cyanosis

* Cardiac tamponade
 
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