TY - JOUR
T1 - Extreme Symptom Burden for Patients With COVID-19 at the End of Life; Extrapolation of Knowledge Gained to Achieve Sustained Comfort and Dignity for all Patients in Their Last Days of Life1
AU - Waldron, Dympna
AU - Mc Carthy, Christine Eileen
AU - Murphy, David
AU - Krawczyk, Janusz
AU - Kelly, Lisa
AU - Walsh, Fiona
AU - Mannion, Eileen
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2023.
PY - 2024/1
Y1 - 2024/1
N2 - Background: We describe two complex cases in the setting of COVID-19 at the End of Life, to enhance learning for all patients. Case Presentation: Maintenance of sustained comfort in two cases required multiple drugs, specifically selected for symptoms that necessitated three separate pumps delivering continuous 24-hour subcutaneous infusion. Case Management: Management of sustained comfort included opioid, midazolam, anti-secretory, diclofenac for intractable temperature, phenobarbital for extreme agitation, in one, where seizure activity was present, while insomnia, was a prominent feature of another. Management of Akatasia was also required. Case Outcome: Attention to each individual patient’s rapidly evolving symptoms, during the dying phase, with a thorough differential diagnosis, wa s vitally important in the context of a ‘Good Death’. This was achieved in both cases, reflected by evidence at the bedside of comfort and a minimum need for ‘as required’ drugs in the last days of life. Conclusions: COVID-19 being a new illness, we need to prospectively study the symptom burden/clustering at End of Life and learn from management of this new disease for other illnesses also. Further research is required to develop protocols on; when does Midazolam dose reach tolerance and when should an alternative drug such as phenobarbital for sustained Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid effects be initiated; examine the optimal approach to sustained temperature control; be cognisant of extrapyramidal side effects of drugs used at End of Life and consider looking at a lack of need for ‘as required’ drugs in the last days of life as an outcome measure of sustained comfort.
AB - Background: We describe two complex cases in the setting of COVID-19 at the End of Life, to enhance learning for all patients. Case Presentation: Maintenance of sustained comfort in two cases required multiple drugs, specifically selected for symptoms that necessitated three separate pumps delivering continuous 24-hour subcutaneous infusion. Case Management: Management of sustained comfort included opioid, midazolam, anti-secretory, diclofenac for intractable temperature, phenobarbital for extreme agitation, in one, where seizure activity was present, while insomnia, was a prominent feature of another. Management of Akatasia was also required. Case Outcome: Attention to each individual patient’s rapidly evolving symptoms, during the dying phase, with a thorough differential diagnosis, wa s vitally important in the context of a ‘Good Death’. This was achieved in both cases, reflected by evidence at the bedside of comfort and a minimum need for ‘as required’ drugs in the last days of life. Conclusions: COVID-19 being a new illness, we need to prospectively study the symptom burden/clustering at End of Life and learn from management of this new disease for other illnesses also. Further research is required to develop protocols on; when does Midazolam dose reach tolerance and when should an alternative drug such as phenobarbital for sustained Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid effects be initiated; examine the optimal approach to sustained temperature control; be cognisant of extrapyramidal side effects of drugs used at End of Life and consider looking at a lack of need for ‘as required’ drugs in the last days of life as an outcome measure of sustained comfort.
KW - covid-19
KW - end-of-life
KW - quality of life
KW - sustained comfort
KW - symptom burden/clustering
KW - symptom control
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85150693565
U2 - 10.1177/10499091231164135
DO - 10.1177/10499091231164135
M3 - Article
C2 - 36912148
AN - SCOPUS:85150693565
SN - 1049-9091
VL - 41
SP - 113
EP - 118
JO - American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
JF - American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine
IS - 1
ER -