On thoughtful selection of medications in the acute critical care setting

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Dr. Alexandra Wichmann

CRITICAL CARE NETWORK

Palliative and End-of-Life Care Section

As critical care medicine continues to advance understanding of ICU survivorship, thoughtful selection of medications in the acute setting can potentially mitigate long-term cognitive, physical, and affective effects.

As of yet, no significant studies have linked opioid use in critical care to new diagnoses of opioid use disorder, but the opioid epidemic has taught us that profligate use of opioids can have devastating effects despite best intentions. Continuous infusions of full agonist opioids for sedation remain an important tool in management of sedation. For acute pain, buprenorphine represents an attractive alternative for patients who are both intubated and nonintubated. It provides equal pain relief as full agonist opioids while causing less respiratory depression, less delirium, less nausea, less constipation, less euphoria, and less misuse potential. Its unique partial mu-opioid agonism is responsible for the improved nausea, constipation, and respiratory depression, while the kappa and delta receptor antagonisms are responsible for antidepressant effects as well as lessened opioid craving, sedation, and dysphoria. Given the variety of doses and routes for buprenorphine, palliative medicine consults can help navigate preventing precipitated withdrawal in patients who are opioid-tolerant and the variety of available dosing and routes.

It is a testament to the growth of critical care medicine that we now have the privilege and responsibility to account for long-term sequelae of our lifesaving interventions, rather than the old model of “prevent death at all costs.” Continued integration of high-quality symptom management into critical care offers an opportunity to better balance life-prolonging treatment and optimize quality of life.

References

1. Neale KJ, Weimer MB, Davis MP, et al. Top ten tips palliative care clinicians should know about buprenorphine. J Palliat Med. 2023;26(1):120-130. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2022.0399
 

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CHEST
Dr. Alexandra Wichmann

CRITICAL CARE NETWORK

Palliative and End-of-Life Care Section

As critical care medicine continues to advance understanding of ICU survivorship, thoughtful selection of medications in the acute setting can potentially mitigate long-term cognitive, physical, and affective effects.

As of yet, no significant studies have linked opioid use in critical care to new diagnoses of opioid use disorder, but the opioid epidemic has taught us that profligate use of opioids can have devastating effects despite best intentions. Continuous infusions of full agonist opioids for sedation remain an important tool in management of sedation. For acute pain, buprenorphine represents an attractive alternative for patients who are both intubated and nonintubated. It provides equal pain relief as full agonist opioids while causing less respiratory depression, less delirium, less nausea, less constipation, less euphoria, and less misuse potential. Its unique partial mu-opioid agonism is responsible for the improved nausea, constipation, and respiratory depression, while the kappa and delta receptor antagonisms are responsible for antidepressant effects as well as lessened opioid craving, sedation, and dysphoria. Given the variety of doses and routes for buprenorphine, palliative medicine consults can help navigate preventing precipitated withdrawal in patients who are opioid-tolerant and the variety of available dosing and routes.

It is a testament to the growth of critical care medicine that we now have the privilege and responsibility to account for long-term sequelae of our lifesaving interventions, rather than the old model of “prevent death at all costs.” Continued integration of high-quality symptom management into critical care offers an opportunity to better balance life-prolonging treatment and optimize quality of life.

References

1. Neale KJ, Weimer MB, Davis MP, et al. Top ten tips palliative care clinicians should know about buprenorphine. J Palliat Med. 2023;26(1):120-130. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2022.0399
 

CHEST
Dr. Alexandra Wichmann

CRITICAL CARE NETWORK

Palliative and End-of-Life Care Section

As critical care medicine continues to advance understanding of ICU survivorship, thoughtful selection of medications in the acute setting can potentially mitigate long-term cognitive, physical, and affective effects.

As of yet, no significant studies have linked opioid use in critical care to new diagnoses of opioid use disorder, but the opioid epidemic has taught us that profligate use of opioids can have devastating effects despite best intentions. Continuous infusions of full agonist opioids for sedation remain an important tool in management of sedation. For acute pain, buprenorphine represents an attractive alternative for patients who are both intubated and nonintubated. It provides equal pain relief as full agonist opioids while causing less respiratory depression, less delirium, less nausea, less constipation, less euphoria, and less misuse potential. Its unique partial mu-opioid agonism is responsible for the improved nausea, constipation, and respiratory depression, while the kappa and delta receptor antagonisms are responsible for antidepressant effects as well as lessened opioid craving, sedation, and dysphoria. Given the variety of doses and routes for buprenorphine, palliative medicine consults can help navigate preventing precipitated withdrawal in patients who are opioid-tolerant and the variety of available dosing and routes.

It is a testament to the growth of critical care medicine that we now have the privilege and responsibility to account for long-term sequelae of our lifesaving interventions, rather than the old model of “prevent death at all costs.” Continued integration of high-quality symptom management into critical care offers an opportunity to better balance life-prolonging treatment and optimize quality of life.

References

1. Neale KJ, Weimer MB, Davis MP, et al. Top ten tips palliative care clinicians should know about buprenorphine. J Palliat Med. 2023;26(1):120-130. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2022.0399
 

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