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ICU Sedation Guide

Drhyo 2025.11.16 20:20 Views : 17

Analgesia → Sedation → Paralysis (always in this order)


1. Sedation Goals

RASS Target

  • Light sedation preferred: RASS –1 to 0

  • Deep sedation only for:

    • Severe ARDS

    • ICP crises

    • Status epilepticus

    • Paralysis (mandatory)

    • Refractory agitation

Daily Requirements

  • SAT (spontaneous awakening trial) every day

  • Assess pain first, then agitation


2. First-Line ICU Sedation Agents

A. Propofol

Starting Dose

  • 5–10 mcg/kg/min

Titrate Range

  • 5–50 mcg/kg/min

Pros

  • Fast on / fast off

  • Easy to titrate

  • Good for neuro exams

  • Anti-epileptic

  • Decreases ICP

Cons

  • Hypotension

  • Hypertriglyceridemia

  • Propofol Infusion Syndrome (PRIS) → rare

  • Not ideal in shock

Monitoring

  • Check triglycerides q3 days

  • Watch MAP closely


B. Dexmedetomidine (Precedex)

Dose

  • 0.2–1.5 mcg/kg/hr

Pros

  • Minimal respiratory depression

  • Can use in non-intubated patients

  • Helps with delirium

  • Best for light sedation

  • Allows patient to be arousable

Cons

  • Bradycardia

  • Hypotension (less than propofol)

  • Cannot achieve deep sedation reliably

Best For

  • Patients near extubation

  • Delirium-prone patients

  • Nighttime sedation


C. Benzodiazepines (Midazolam, Lorazepam)

Midazolam

  • Start 1–2 mg/hr, titrate to 2–7 mg/hr

Lorazepam (not preferred)

  • 1–4 mg IV q2–6 hrs

    • Risk of propylene glycol toxicity with infusion

Pros

  • Useful for seizures

  • Useful when deep sedation is needed and pressors high

Cons

  • Strongly associated with delirium

  • Accumulates in renal/hepatic failure

  • Slower weaning

  • Prolonged extubation times

Best For

  • Status epilepticus

  • Severe alcohol withdrawal

  • Deep sedation when propofol not tolerated


3. Analgesia (Always Treat Pain First)

Fentanyl

  • 25–100 mcg/hr, titrate up to 200+

  • Fast onset

  • Less hypotension

  • Common for intubated patients

Hydromorphone (Dilaudid)

  • 0.2–0.6 mg/hr

  • Good for opioid-tolerant patients

  • Longer half-life → accumulates

Morphine

  • Rarely used in ICU

  • Risk of histamine release, hypotension


4. Paralytics (ONLY with deep sedation)

Never paralyze unless patient is:

  • Adequately sedated

  • Hydrated

  • Monitored with TOF (train-of-four)

Common Agents

  • Cisatracurium (preferred; Hoffman elimination)

  • Rocuronium (renal/hepatic clearance)

Indications

  • Severe ARDS

  • Vent dyssynchrony despite sedation

  • Elevated ICP

  • Procedures

Important

ALWAYS use eye lubrication and deep sedation.


5. Sedation Strategy by Clinical Scenario

A. Near Extubation

Dexmedetomidine

B. Intubated, stable BP

Propofol ± fentanyl

C. On multiple pressors / shock

Fentanyl + midazolam (not preferred, but safest)

D. Neuro exam needed

Propofol (fast on/off)

E. Delirium-prone

Dexmedetomidine

F. Severe ARDS

Propofol + fentanyl ± neuromuscular blockade

G. Alcohol withdrawal

Midazolam infusion or phenobarbital protocol


6. Monitoring Requirements

  • RASS checks Q1 hr

  • Daily SAT

  • For propofol:

    • Triglycerides

    • CK if concern for PRIS

  • For benzos:

    • Monitor for accumulation

  • For paralytics:

    • Train-of-four

    • Eye care


7. Sedation Intensivist Tips (What Fellows & Attendings Want You to Know)

  • Light sedation improves mortality in ventilated patients

  • Propofol is great, unless the patient is on high-dose pressors

  • Dexmedetomidine is the best for weaning

  • If agitation persists → treat pain first

  • Don’t forget bowel regimen with opioids

  • Keep sedation targeted — avoid overshooting

  • Daily SAT + SBT dramatically reduces vent days


 

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