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Best PICU Specialists in KPHB

PICU

It is often tense and stressful when kids are in the hospital and more so if they are in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). Ankura Hospital can understand your concerns and is always ready to help. Ankura has the best PICU Specialists in KPHB, we are well-equipped with experienced medical professionals and facilities to make you feel better prepared to help your child.

 The PICU is essentially a section of the hospital that provides sick children with the highest level of medical care. It differs from other parts of the hospital, like the general medical floors. The PICUs of Ankura Hospital give kids the intensive nursing care they need and closely monitor vitals like heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure. Our medical staff also provides therapies that might only be available in PICUs. These can include ventilators (breathing machines) and medicines used only under close medical supervision.

Why PICU?

  • If a child is seriously ill or needs intensive care that cannot be met on the hospital’s main medical floors, they need intensive care units specially designed for their requirement, called the PICU. 
  • Kids with severe breathing trouble from asthma, serious infections, diabetes complications, or those involved in a severe automobile accident or near-drowning go to the PICU. 
  • Even kids on the hospital’s medical-surgical floors are moved to the PICUs if their condition deteriorates or becomes unstable. 
  • After a major surgery, kids are usually kept under observation in the PICU until they get a little better. The period of stay at the PICU depends on their condition. Depending on their recovery time, they can stay for a day or even a month. 

Facilities of PICU at Ankura

If you have any doubts or questions, the experts at Ankura are always there to help.

The facilities of Ankura Hospital’s Pediatric Intensive Care Unit include:

    1. Latest generation multi-channel cardiac monitors
    2. In-house 2D echo and ultrasound machines
    3. Intracranial pressure monitoring equipment
    4. Continuous video EEG monitoring facility
    5. Hemodialysis machine
    6. The latest generation ventilators
    7. High-Frequency Oscillators
    8. Nitric Oxide inhalation
    9. Whole-body cooling devices
    10. High-end giraffe incubators
    11. Radiant warmers

We have a team of highly skilled pediatric intensivists and our on-ground support team that ensures the safety of the PICU section at Ankura Hospitals. They are also highly concerned about the proper treatment acquired by your child. We are with you in every step of your struggle. Book an appointment with us!

FAQ's

The Pediatric Intensive Treatment Unit (PICU) is a multidisciplinary team that delivers the highest degree of medical care to severely ill children. It is similar to the main medical floors in that it differs from other hospital departments. Children in PICU, for example, receive comprehensive nursing care and have their breathing, heart rate, and blood pressure closely monitored.

Any critically ill patient, from newborns to young adults, can be admitted to the PICU, while babies are transported to the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) (Neonatal Intensive Care Unit). The vast majority of the patients are under the age of eighteen. Some people with rare disorders may be a little older.

PICU can be needed for the following reasons:

  • Congenital abnormalities
  • Autoimmune disorders
  • Complex surgery
  • Severe infection
  • Physical trauma
  • Medication overdose

Intravenous catheters, medications, monitors, tests, and ventilators.

NICU stands for Neonatal Intensive Care Unit and is an area of the hospital that specializes solely in the treatment of newborns. PICU stands for Pediatric Intensive Care Unit and is where children are taken when they require the highest level of quality pediatric care.

Breathing assistance is sometimes required in the PICU for children. This could entail using a face mask or nasal tubing to acquire more oxygen. However, a youngster may need to be linked to a ventilator at times (or breathing machine). An endotracheal tube (a plastic tube put into the windpipe through the mouth or nose) or a tracheostomy (a plastic tube introduced directly into the windpipe through the skin) attached to the ventilator on the other end is used to do this. There are various types of ventilators, but they all serve the same purpose: to assist a youngster in breathing. While the breathing tube is in the child’s windpipe, they will be given sedatives and pain relievers.

 

Doctors may request a range of tests, such as blood tests and urine tests, to obtain additional information. The cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), which surrounds the brain and spinal cord, is sometimes tested. An X-ray, ultrasound, computed tomography (commonly known as a CT or CAT scan), and magnetic resonance imaging can all be used to take images or photos of different sections of the body (MRI).

The PICU doctors and nurses will not transfer children unless they are ready and stable. The team on the normal floor of the hospital also has the resources necessary to continue supporting your child’s rehabilitation. Taking care of a seriously ill child can be difficult. Work with the PICU team and ask questions when you have doubts. This will assist you in supporting your child and making plans for when the complete family returns home.

Book An Appointment

Please feel welcome to contact our friendly reception staff with any general or medical enquiry. Our doctors will receive or return any urgent calls.

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