Guidelines and principles for the care of the cardiothoracic transplant patient in the intensive care unit

Michael Nurok, Mark E. Nunnally, Michael O'Connor, Richard N. Pierson, David A. Baran, Michael D. Harper, Darren Malinoski, Aly El Banayosy, Abiodun Orija, Shelley Hall, Jeffrey D. Edelman, Thoralf M. Sundt, Deborah Levine, Jon Kobashigawa, David Nelson

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Heart and lung transplant recipients require care provided by clinicians from multiple different specialties, each contributing unique expertise and perspective. The period the patient spends in the intensive care unit is one of the most critical times in the perioperative trajectory. Various organizational models of intensive care exist, including those led by intensivists, surgeons, transplant cardiologists, and pulmonologists. Coordinating timely efficient intensive care is an essential and logistically difficult goal. The present work product of the American Society of Transplantation's Thoracic and Critical Care Community of Practice, Critical Care Task Force outlines operational guidelines and principles that may be applied in different organizational models to optimize the delivery of intensive care for the cardiothoracic organ recipient.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere14978
JournalClinical Transplantation
Volume37
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2023

Keywords

  • communication
  • coordination
  • handoff
  • heart transplantation
  • intensive care
  • lung transplantation
  • teamwork

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Transplantation

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