The intensive care unit is one of the most unnerving areas in a hospital, and it is quite normal to be anxious and worried about your visit.
The machines in the ICU make a variety of sounds, such as bleeps and alarms. Some sounds make staff aware of slight changes to a patient’s condition, or alert them when something needs attention. A few alarms need the nurse’s immediate attention but most just or show standard monitoring. Some of the main ICU machines and what they do are described below:
Ventilators and breathing tubes
Some patients in the ICU need help breathing. To help them they sometimes need to be sedated and use a breathing tube attached to a machine called a ventilator.
Modern ventilators use complex computers to allow patients to breath as much as they can for themselves with variable amounts of help from the machine.
Kidney machines
Sometimes patient’s kidneys stop working properly due to their illness. The kidney works to filter the blood and remove waste products, which are passed out of the body as urine. If this fails, a machine called a dialysis machine can take over this job. To do this a large tube is put into one of the bigger veins in the leg or neck.
Monitors
Patients in intensive care are constantly monitored to track their condition and alert staff to changes. Monitors that are used to keep track of the patient’s condition often measure:
- Heart rate and heart electrical tracing (ECG)
- Oxygen levels in the blood
- Blood pressure
- Pressure in the veins (CVP)
- Urine output
- Temperature
- All the fluids, food and drugs the patient takes
The monitors track even tiny changes in the patient’s condition and will inform ICU staff.
Monitors often make a lot of noises, this does not necessarily mean something dangerous has happened. Often alarms are just to let the staff know the patient’s condition.
Lines (drips)
These are plastic tubes sometimes referred to as “drips”. These are inserted into the patient’s blood vessels. The lines help to give fluids or medication and to help monitor blood pressure or take blood samples for regular testing.
Common lines include:
How lines are inserted
Lines are inserted by a doctor or nurse who is experienced in the procedure and lines are inserted under local anaesthetic to make the patient more comfortable.
Feeding in ICU
Patients in ICU are at risk of malnutrition because of their illness. It is therefore important to ensure the patient gets the nutrition and calories they need to fight their illness and help their recovery.
Scanning
Your relative may need to have further testing carried out whilst they are staying in ICU. Some of these test can be carried out on the unit, whilst others need specialist machinery and equipment.
CT and MRI
Computerised tomography scans (CT or CAT scans) and Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) can be used to get a clearer picture of what is going on inside a patient than can be seen with an x-ray. To have these scans, the patient will need to be taken to the x-ray department, as the machines that are used are very large. Whilst they are being transferred and scanned, they will be escorted and monitored by a specially trained doctor or nurse who can give any treatment they require.
Ultrasound
Ultrasound is a commonly used device in the ICU. It is used to help doctors when they are inserting lines, as well as being an easy to use and safe scanning tool. The scanner is portable and can be used at your relative’s bedside.
The scanner works by emitting a very high frequency sound, which is too high pitch for people to hear. The machine then detects the echos of that sound from things inside the body, which is then turned into a picture by the computer. This is completely safe and is very useful to check what’s going on inside a patient without having to have specialist scans.