Frailty in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit: Assessment and Impact.
Mohamad B MoumnehYasser JamilKriti KalraNaila IjazGreta CampbellAjar KocharMichael G NannaSean Van DiepenAbdulla A DamlujiPublished in: European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care (2024)
Frailty, a clinical syndrome of increased vulnerability, due to diminished cognitive, physical, and physiological reserves is a growing concern in the cardiac intensive care unit (CICU). It contributes to morbidity, mortality, and complications and often exerts a bidirectional association with cardiovascular disease. Althought it predominately affects older adults, frailty can also be observed in younger patients less than 65 years of age, with approximately 30% of those admitted CICU are frail. Acute cardiovascular illness can also impair physical and cognitive functioning among survivors and these survivors often suffer from frailty and functional declines post-CICU discharge. Patients with frailty in the CICU often have higher comorbidity burden and they are less likely to receive optimal therapy for their acute cardiovascular conditions. Given the significance of this geriatric syndrome, this review will focus on assessment, clinical outcomes, and interventions, in an attempt to establish appropriate assessment, management, and resource utilization in frail patients during and after CICU admission.
Keyphrases
- intensive care unit
- community dwelling
- cardiovascular disease
- end stage renal disease
- physical activity
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- emergency department
- mental health
- young adults
- peritoneal dialysis
- metabolic syndrome
- respiratory failure
- cardiovascular events
- drug induced
- hepatitis b virus
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- cardiovascular risk factors