Critical care unit (CCU) provides the full range of appropriate services. Under the state insurance and with the full compliance of guidelines and protocols, we offer patients 24 hour inpatient care. An critical care unit (CCU), also known as intensive care unit (ICU), is a special department of a hospital or health care facility that provides intensive treatment medicine. Intensive care units cater to patients with severe or life-threatening illnesses and injuries, which require constant care, close supervision from life support equipment and medication in order to ensure normal live sources. They are staffed by highly trained physicians, nurses and respiratory therapists who specialize in caring for critically ill patients. CCUs are also distinguished from general hospital wards by a higher staff-to-patient ratio and to access to advanced medical resources and equipment that is not routinely available elsewhere.
- The main directions of the unit are:
- Cardiovascular system pathologies.
- Decompensated lung pathology.
- Acute disorder of blood circulation in brain.
- Acute liver and kidney disfunction.
- Treatment of complicated patients with various shocks.
- Postoperative period management of patients after various types of surgery.
- Management of patients with systemic inflammatory response syndrome and sepsis.
- Management of patients with syndrome of adult respiratory distress.
- The main treatment methods in resuscitation and intensive care unit.
- To maintain appropriate hemodynamic indicators.
- Recovery and maintenance volemic-electrolyte balance.
- Ventilation management of lungs.
- Extracorporeal detoxification.
- Pain management.
- Correction of damaged metabolism.
- Antibacterial therapy.
- Enteral and parenteral nutrition.