Pediatric Neurocritical Care: A Neurology Consultation Model and Implication for Education and Training

We describe a model of service using a Neurology Consulting Team in the intensive care unit setting. Medical records were reviewed from a 32-month cohort of Neurology Consulting Team referrals. Six hundred eighty-nine (19%) of 3719 patients admitted to the intensive care unit were assessed by the team. The most common diagnostic categories were seizures, neurosurgical, cerebrovascular, or central nervous system infection. Fifty-seven percent (350 of 615 patients) required mechanical ventilation. Cohort mortality was 7% vs 2% for the general intensive care population (P < 0.01). The team provided 4592 initial and subsequent consultations; on average there were five to six new consultations per week. Each patient had a median of two (interquartile range, 1 to 6) consultations during admission. Three quarters of the cohort required neurodiagnostic investigation (1625 tests), with each patient undergoing a median of two (range, 0 to 3) studies. Taken together, the subset of pediatric intensive care unit patients undergoing neurology consultation, investigation, and management represents a significant practice experience for trainees, which has implications for future curriculum development in both pediatric critical care medicine and pediatric neurology.
Source: Pediatric Neurology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Original Articles Source Type: research