| Literature DB >> 27478617 |
Shunsuke Taito1, Nobuaki Shime2, Kohei Ota2, Hideto Yasuda3.
Abstract
Several recent studies have suggested that the early mobilization of mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit is safe and effective. However, in these studies, few patients reached high levels of active mobilization, and the standard of care among the studies has been inconsistent. The incidence of adverse events during early mobilization is low. Its importance should be considered in the context of the ABCDE bundle. Protocols of early mobilization with strict inclusion and exclusion criteria are needed to further investigate its contributions.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse event; Early mobilization; Intensive care unit; Mechanically ventilated patients; Rehabilitation
Year: 2016 PMID: 27478617 PMCID: PMC4966815 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-016-0179-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Randomized studies of the effects of early mobilization
| Reference # |
| Study group | Days between intubation and onset of | Outcomes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | |||
| [ | 104 | Exercise and mobilization | Standard care | 1.5 | 7.4 | Primary: number of patients returning to independent functional status (ability to perform 6 daily activities and walking independently) at time of discharge from hospital. |
| [ | 90 | Usual care + bicycle ergometer, 20 min/day, at an intensity level adjusted individually ×5 days/week | Respiratory therapy adjusted to the individual needs + standardized sessions of upper and lower extremities mobilization 5 days/week | 14 | 10 | Primary: distance covered in 6 min at time of discharge from the hospital |
| [ | 150 | Mechanically ventilated patient: physical therapy 15 min/day | Physical therapists provided respiratory and mobility management, based upon individual patient assessment according to unit protocols | 5 | 5 | Primary: distance covered in 6 min at 12 months |
| [ | 120 | Delivered for 30 min/day, 7 days/week, while in ICU. | Standard of care physical therapy programs based on national survey | 8 | 8 | Primary: short form of the continuous scale physical functional performance test at 4 weeks |
| [ | 50 | Early goal-directed mobilization comprised functional rehabilitation treatment at the highest level of activity possible for that patient assessed by the ICU mobility scale while receiving mechanical ventilation. | Not based on protocol | 3 | 3 | Primary: higher maximum level of activity measured using the ICU mobility scale, increased duration of activity measured in min/day during the ICU stay compared with standard care |
| [ | 300 | Standardized rehabilitation therapy | Usual care; received routine care as dictated by the patient’s attending physician from Monday through Friday | 1 | 7 | Primary: hospital length of stay |
Adverse events during early mobilization
| Reference # |
| Early mobilization intervention | Incidence of adverse events | Adverse events |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 103 | Active mobilization: 1449 sessions: sitting on bed and in chair, ambulation | 0.96 % | Fall, systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg, oxygen desaturation, feeding tube extraction, systolic blood pressure >200 mmHg |
| [ | 90 | Passive and active therapy, bicycle ergometer exercise | 3.76 % | SpO2 < 90 %, systolic blood pressure >180 mmHg, >20 % decrease in diastolic blood pressure |
| [ | 104 | Passive and active range of motion, sitting, balance exercises, activities of daily living, transfer training, walking | 4.0 % | Patient instability (most often because of perceived patient-ventilator asynchrony), 0.2 % serious (desaturation <80 %) |
| [ | 99 | Active mobilization: 498 sessions | 16 % | Desaturation ≧5 %, heart rate increase >20 %, ventilator asynchrony/tachypnea, agitation/discomfort, device removal |
| [ | 20 | Active mobilization: 424 sessions: chair sitting, head up tilt, walking | 3 % | Decreased muscle tone, hypoxemia, extubation, orthostatic, hypotension |
| [ | 150 | Walking in place, sit to stand transfers, arm and leg active range of motion | None major | – |
| [ | 1110 | Active mobilization: 5267 session: in-bed exercise, in-bed bicycling, sitting, transfer, standing, walking | 0.6 % | Arrhythmia, MAP > 140 mmHg, MAP < 55 mmHg, oxygen desaturation, fall, feeding tube extraction, radial artery catheter removal, chest tube removal |
| [ | 637 | 16-level early progressive mobility protocol | Not validated | – |
| [ | 99 | Active mobilization: 520 sessions | 5 % | Respiratory distress, desaturation, tachypnea or bradycardia, patient’s intolerance, tracheostomy removal |
| [ | 120 | Proper breathing techniques during exercise, progressive range of motion, muscle strengthening exercises, exercises designed to improve core mobility and strength, functional mobility retraining | 0.16 % | Syncopal episode during a PT session, readmitted to the hospital with polyarthralgia |
| [ | 50 | Early goal-directed mobilization | 0.96 % | Fall, systolic blood pressure <90 mmHg, oxygen desaturation, feeding tube extraction, systolic blood pressure >200 mmHg |
| [ | 300 | Passive range of motion, physical therapy, and progressive resistance exercises | 6.0 % | Deaths, device removals, reintubations, and patient falls during physical therapy |