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Item Aging and Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS): A Critical Need for Geriatric Psychiatry(Elsevier, 2017) Wang, Sophia; Allen, Duane; Kheir, You Na; Campbell, Noll; Khan, Babar; Department of Psychiatry, IU School of MedicineDue to the aging of the intensive care unit (ICU) population and an improvement in survival rates after ICU hospitalization, an increasing number of older adults are suffering from long-term impairments due to critical illness, known as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). This paper focuses on PICS-related cognitive, psychological, and physical impairments, and the impact of ICU hospitalization on families and caregivers. The authors also describe innovative models of care for PICS, and what roles geriatric psychiatrists could play in the future of this rapidly growing population.Item Aging and Post-Intensive Care Syndrome–Family (PICS-F): A Critical Need for Geriatric Psychiatry(Elsevier, 2019) Serrano, Patricia; Kheir, You Na P.; Wang, Sophia; Khan, Sikandar; Scheunemann, Leslie; Khan, Babar; Psychiatry, School of MedicinePost-intensive care syndrome–family (PICS-F) describes the psychological symptoms that affect the family members of patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit (ICU) or recently discharged from the ICU. Geriatric psychiatrists should be concerned about PICS-F for several reasons. First, ICU hospitalization in older adults is associated with higher rates of cognitive and physical impairment, compared to older adults hospitalized in non-ICU settings or dwelling in the community. This confers a special burden on the caregivers of these older ICU survivors compared to other geriatric populations. Second, as caregivers themselves age, caring for this unique burden can be more challenging compared to other geriatric populations. Third, evidence for models of care centered on patients with multimorbidity and their caregivers is limited. A deeper understanding of how to care for PICS and PICS-F may inform clinical practice for other geriatric populations with multimorbidity and their caregivers. Geriatric psychiatrists may play a key role in delivering coordinated care for PICS-F by facilitating timely diagnosis and interdisciplinary collaboration, advocating for the healthcare needs of family members suffering from PICS-F, and leading efforts within healthcare systems to increase awareness and treatment of PICS-F. This clinical review will appraise the current literature about the impact of critical illness on the family members of ICU survivors and identify crucial gaps in our knowledge about PICS-F among aging patients and caregivers.Item Aging and Post-Intensive Care Syndrome–Family (PICS-F): A Critical Need for Geriatric Psychiatry(Elsevier, 2019) Serrano, Patricia; Kheir, You Na P.; Wang, Sophia; Khan, Sikandar; Scheunemann, Leslie; Khan, Babar; Psychiatry, School of MedicinePostintensive care syndrome–family (PICS-F) describes the psychological symptoms that affect the family members of patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit (ICU) or recently discharged from the ICU. Geriatric psychiatrists should be concerned about PICS-F for several reasons. First, ICU hospitalization in older adults is associated with higher rates of cognitive and physical impairment compared with older adults hospitalized in non-ICU settings or dwelling in the community. This confers a special burden on the caregivers of these older ICU survivors compared with other geriatric populations. Second, as caregivers themselves age, caring for this unique burden can be more challenging compared with other geriatric populations. Third, evidence for models of care centered on patients with multimorbidity and their caregivers is limited. A deeper understanding of how to care for PICS and PICS-F may inform clinical practice for other geriatric populations with multimorbidity and their caregivers. Geriatric psychiatrists may play a key role in delivering coordinated care for PICS-F by facilitating timely diagnosis and interdisciplinary collaboration, advocating for the healthcare needs of family members suffering from PICS-F, and leading efforts within healthcare systems to increase awareness and treatment of PICS-F. This clinical review will appraise the current literature about the impact of critical illness on the family members of ICU survivors and identify crucial gaps in our knowledge about PICS-F among aging patients and caregivers.Item Antidepressant Use and Depressive Symptoms in Intensive Care Unit Survivors(SHM, 2017) Wang, Sophia; Mosher, Chris; Gao, Sujuan; Kirk, Kayla; Lasiter, Sue; Khan, Sikandar; Kheir, You Na; Boustani, Malaz; Khan, Babar; Psychiatry, School of MedicineNearly 30% of intensive care unit (ICU) survivors have depressive symptoms 2-12 months after hospital discharge. We examined the prevalence of depressive symptoms and risk factors for depressive symptoms in 204 patients at their initial evaluation in the Critical Care Recovery Center (CCRC), an ICU survivor clinic based at Eskenazi Hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana. Thirty-two percent (N = 65) of patients had depressive symptoms on initial CCRC visit. For patients who are not on an antidepressant at their initial CCRC visit (N = 135), younger age and lower education level were associated with a higher likelihood of having depressive symptoms. For patients on an antidepressant at their initial CCRC visit (N = 69), younger age and being African American race were associated with a higher likelihood of having depressive symptoms. Future studies will need to confirm these findings and examine new approaches to increase access to depression treatment and test new antidepressant regimens for post-ICU depression.Item Association of Tryptophan and NAD+ Metabolites with Brain and Skeletal Muscle Function in Critical Care Patients and Survivors(2024-07) Yates, Brandon Alston; Coggan, Andrew; Khan, Babar; Kroenke, Kurt; Liu, Ziyue; Newman, JohnBackground: Patients who survive Intensive Care Unit (ICU) acquired delirium will likely experience new or worsened physical, mental, and/or cognitive impairments (termed Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS)). Although advances in critical care treatments have reduced mortality rates among older adult ICU survivors, roughly 67% suffer PICS. The most vulnerable to long-term physical and cognitive impairments are older adults or those who exhibit accelerated aging because of pre-existing physical frailty or cognitive frailty. Yet, identification of at-risk patients during admittance is likely difficult because of the 1) homogeneity in the clinical presentation of patients with pre-existing age-related physical frailty and critical illness compared to those suffering from only critical illness and 2) many patients arrive severely debilitated making administration of physical function or other volitional assessments difficult. Therefore, it is essential that new biomarkers to guide early diagnosis, prognosis, and disease monitoring are identified. To this point, tryptophan derivatives, particularly kynurenines and nicotinamide family (e.g., NAD+), have been shown to mediate the relationship between chronic inflammation and physical impairment or signal accelerated aging, respectively. However, it remains unknown if similar associations exist in ICU patients and the prognostic utility of elevated neurotoxic tryptophan metabolites relative to neuroprotective tryptophan metabolites to predict adverse health outcomes while in the ICU. Methods: A secondary analysis of pooled data from three randomized control trials was used to investigate the following aims. To address Aims 1 and 2, blood samples from patients with ICU acquired delirium were analyzed for kynurenine and salvage pathway metabolites. To address Aim 3, blood samples from patients who survived an ICU stay, experienced ICU delirium, and completed both objective and subjective physical function assessments within in month of ICU discharge and before the COVID-19 pandemic. Results: Delirium duration was significantly (p< 0.05) associated with elevated circulating kynurenine and lower NAD+. Delirium severity was significantly associated with elevated circulating lower NAD+ but not kynurenine. Post-ICU physical function performance was significantly associated with elevated circulating kynurenine but not NAD+. Conclusion: Elevated concentration of frailty biomarkers are associated with delirium severity and duration in the ICU and post-ICU physical function.Item Can Salivary Innate Immune Molecules Provide Clue on Taste Dysfunction in COVID-19?(Frontiers, 2021-10) Ermel, Aaron; Thyvalikakath, Thankam Paul; Foroud, Tatiana; Khan, Babar; Srinivasan, Mythily; Medicine, School of MedicineEmerging concerns following the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (SARS-CoV2) pandemic are the long-term effects of coronavirus disease (COVID)-19. Dysgeusia in COVID-19 is supported by the abundant expression of the entry receptor, angiotensin-converting enzyme-2 (ACE2), in the oral mucosa. The invading virus perturbs the commensal biofilm and regulates the host responses that permit or suppress viral infection. We correlated the microbial recognition receptors and soluble ACE2 (sACE2) with the SARS-CoV2 measures in the saliva of COVID-19 patients. Data indicate that the toll-like receptor-4, peptidoglycan recognition protein, and sACE2 are elevated in COVID-19 saliva and correlate moderately with the viral load.Item Critical Care Follow-up Clinics: A Scoping Review of Interventions and Outcomes(Wolters Kluwer, 2016-07) Lasiter, Sue; Oles, Sylwia K.; Mundell, James; London, Susan; Khan, Babar; School of NursingOBJECTIVE: The purpose of this scoping review is to identify evidence describing benefits of interventions provided in intensive care unit (ICU) survivor follow-up clinics. BACKGROUND: Advances in ICU treatments have increased the number of survivors who require specialized care for ICU-related sequelae. Intensive care unit survivor follow-up clinics exist, yet little is known about the nature and impact of interventions provided in such clinics. A scoping review of publications about in-person post-ICU follow-up care was undertaken. METHOD: Ten databases were searched yielding 111 relevant unique publication titles and abstracts. Sample heterogeneity supported using a scoping review method. After excluding nonrelated publications, 33 reports were fully reviewed. Twenty international publications were included that described ICU follow-up clinic interventions and/or outcomes. RESULTS: Authors discussed very diverse interventions in 15 publications, and 9 reported some level of intervention effectiveness. Evidence was strongest that supported the use of prospective diaries as an intervention to prevent or improve psychological symptoms, whereas evidence to support implementation of other interventions was weak. CONCLUSIONS: Although ICU follow-up clinics exist, evidence for interventions and effectiveness of treatments in these clinics remains underexplored. IMPLICATIONS: Intensive care unit survivor follow-up clinics provide a venue for further interdisciplinary intervention research that could lead to better health outcomes for ICU survivors.Item Critical Care Recovery Center: a model of agile implementation in intensive care unit (ICU) survivors(Cambridge University Press, 2020-12) Wang, Sophia; Hanneman, Philip; Xu, Chenjia; Gao, Sujuan; Allen, Duane; Golovyan, Dmitry; Kheir, You Na; Fowler, Nicole; Austrom, Mary; Khan, Sikandar; Boustani, Malaz; Khan, Babar; Psychiatry, School of MedicineBackground: As many as 70% of intensive care unit (ICU) survivors suffer from long-term physical, cognitive, and psychological impairments known as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). We describe how the first ICU survivor clinic in the United States, the Critical Care Recovery Center (CCRC), was designed to address PICS using the principles of Agile Implementation (AI). Methods: The CCRC was designed using an eight-step process known as the AI Science Playbook. Patients who required mechanical ventilation or were delirious ≥48 hours during their ICU stay were enrolled in the CCRC. One hundred twenty subjects who completed baseline HABC-M CG assessments and had demographics collected were included in the analysis to identify baseline characteristics that correlated with higher HABC-M CG scores. A subset of patients and caregivers also participated in focus group interviews to describe their perceptions of PICS. Results: Quantitative analyses showed that the cognitive impairment was a major concern of caregivers. Focus group data also confirmed that caregivers of ICU survivors (n = 8) were more likely to perceive cognitive and mental health symptoms than ICU survivors (n = 10). Caregivers also described a need for ongoing psychoeducation about PICS, particularly cognitive and mental health symptoms, and for ongoing support from other caregivers with similar experiences. Conclusions: Our study demonstrated how the AI Science Playbook was used to build the first ICU survivor clinic in the United States. Caregivers of ICU survivors continue to struggle with PICS, particularly cognitive impairment, months to years after discharge. Future studies will need to examine whether the CCRC model of care can be adapted to other complex patient populations seen by health-care professionals.Item Decreasing Delirium through Music (DDM) in critically ill, mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit: study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial(BMC, 2017-11-29) Khan, Sikandar H.; Wang, Sophia; Harrawood, Amanda; Martinez, Stephanie; Heiderscheit, Annie; Chlan, Linda; Perkins, Anthony J.; Tu, Wanzhu; Boustani, Malaz; Khan, Babar; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground Delirium is a highly prevalent and morbid syndrome in intensive care units (ICUs). Changing the stressful environment within the ICU via music may be an effective and a scalable way to reduce the burden of delirium. Methods/design The Decreasing Delirium through Music (DDM) study is a three-arm, single-blind, randomized controlled feasibility trial., Sixty patients admitted to the ICU with respiratory failure requiring mechanical ventilation will be randomized to one of three arms (20 participants per arm): (1) personalized music, (2) non-personalized relaxing music, or (3) attention-control. Music preferences will be obtained from all enrolled participants or their family caregivers. Participants will receive two 1-h audio sessions a day through noise-cancelling headphones and mp3 players. Our primary aim is to determine the feasibility of the trial design (recruitment, adherence, participant retention, design and delivery of the music intervention). Our secondary aim is to estimate the potential effect size of patient-preferred music listening in reducing delirium, as measured by the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM-ICU). Participants will receive twice daily assessments for level of sedation and presence of delirium. Enrolled participants will be followed in the hospital until death, discharge, or up to 28 days, and seen in the Critical Care Recovery Clinic at 90 days. Discussion DDM is a feasibility trial to provide personalized and non-personalized music interventions for critically ill, mechanically ventilated patients. Our trial will also estimate the preliminary efficacy of music interventions on reducing delirium incidence and severity. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov, Identifier: NCT03095443. Registered on 23 March 2017. Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13063-017-2324-6) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Item Decreasing delirium through music listening (DDM) in critically ill, mechanically ventilated older adults in the intensive care unit: a two-arm, parallel-group, randomized clinical trial(BMC, 2022-07-19) Seyffert, Sarah; Moiz, Salwa; Coghlan, Matthew; Balozian, Patil; Nasser, Jason; Rached, Emilio Abi; Jamil, Yasser; Naqvi, Kiran; Rawlings, Lori; Perkins, Anthony J.; Gao, Sujuan; Hunter, J. Downs, III.; Khan, Sikandar; Heiderscheit, Annie; Chlan, Linda L.; Khan, Babar; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: Delirium is a highly prevalent and morbid syndrome in mechanically ventilated intensive care unit (ICU) patients. Music is a promising non-pharmacological intervention with beneficial effects on anxiety and stress, while its effects on delirium duration and severity are not well understood. Methods/design: Our study is a two-arm, randomized parallel-group, clinical trial to evaluate the efficacy of music intervention compared to a silence-track attention control on delirium/coma duration in mechanically ventilated critically ill older adults. One hundred sixty mechanically ventilated adults 50 years of age or older will be randomized to one of two arms within 72 h of ICU admission: (1) 1-h music listening sessions twice daily through noise-canceling headphones, or (2) 1-h sessions of a silence track twice daily through noise-canceling headphones. Our primary aim is to compare delirium/coma-free days after randomization during the 7-day study intervention phase using the Confusion Assessment Method for the ICU (CAM ICU) and the Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale (RASS) for delirium and coma. Secondary outcomes include pain and anxiety evaluated twice daily during the intervention phase and throughout the duration of ICU stay using the Critical Care Pain Observation Tool (CPOT) and visual analog scale-anxiety (VAS-A). Enrolled participants will be followed after hospital discharge to further measure cognition as well as screening for depression and anxiety using the following telephone-based instruments: Indiana University Telephone-Based Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (IU TBANS), Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), and Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7). Discussion: This randomized clinical trial will measure the efficacy of a music listening intervention for delirium and coma duration early in the intensive care unit among older adults.