| Literature DB >> 29484188 |
Keibun Liu1, Takayuki Ogura1, Kunihiko Takahashi2, Mitsunobu Nakamura2, Hiroaki Ohtake3, Kenji Fujiduka1, Emi Abe4, Hitoshi Oosaki3, Dai Miyazaki1, Hiroyuki Suzuki1, Mitsuaki Nishikimi1, Alan Kawarai Lefor5, Takashi Mato6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There are numerous barriers to early mobilization (EM) in a resource-limited intensive care unit (ICU) without a specialized team or an EM culture, regarding patient stability while critically ill or in the presence of medical devices. We hypothesized that ICU physicians can overcome these barriers. The aim of this study was to investigate the safety of EM according to the Maebashi EM protocol conducted by ICU physicians.Entities:
Keywords: Acute phase; Early mobilization; ICU physicians; Medical devices; Protocol; Safety
Year: 2018 PMID: 29484188 PMCID: PMC5819168 DOI: 10.1186/s40560-018-0281-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Intensive Care ISSN: 2052-0492
Fig. 1The Maebashi early mobilization protocol. ICU intensive care unit, EM early mobilization, RASS Richmond agitation sedation scale. a The sedation adjusting strategy depends on ICU physicians without any sedation protocol. b If the physical therapist cannot attend the session, the team is still three people and includes a physician, a charge nurse, and another ICU nurse
Fig. 2The Maebashi Early Mobilization Algorithm: a flow chart, PEEP positive end-expiratory pressure, RASS Richmond agitation sedation scale. This is the Maebashi early mobilization protocol algorithm. ICU physicians have to decide the mobilization level according to the algorithm every day. The contents of the mobilization level is as follows: level 1: no mobilization, bed exercise such as passive range of motion and passive transfer to chair; level 2: sitting position in bed, including using cycling ergometer and active range of motion; level 3: sitting on edge of bed; level 4: active transfer to chair; level 5: standing, stepping in place, and ambulating
Baseline patient characteristics (n = 232)
| Variable | Values median [IQR] or number (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years), median [IQR] | 69.0 [55.8–80.0] |
| Gender (male), | 156 (67%) |
| BMI (kg/m2), median [IQR] | 21.1 [18.8–24.2] |
| Ambulatory prior to admission, | 208 (90%) |
| Admitted from | |
| Emergency room, | 181 (78%) |
| Hospital ward, | 51 (22%) |
| ICU admission diagnosis | |
| Sepsis, | 92 (40%) |
| Gastrointestinal, | 49 (21%) |
| Respiratory failure, | 29 (13%) |
| Trauma, | 28 (12%) |
| Drug abuse, | 12 (5%) |
| Others, | 22 (9%) |
| APACHE II score, median [IQR] | 16 [10–22] |
| SOFA on admission, median [IQR] | 4 [2–7] |
| Patients undergoing mechanical ventilation, | 72 (31%) |
| Patients receiving ECMO, | 6 (2.6%) |
| Patients receiving continuous analgesia (opiates), | 117 (50%) |
| Patients receiving continuous sedation, | 82 (35%) |
| Patients receiving vasopressors, | 87 (38%) |
| Patients receiving steroids, | 39 (17%) |
| Patients receiving neuromuscular blocking agents, | 2 (0.90%) |
| Patients receiving dialysis, | 34 (15%) |
| ICU length of stay (days), median [IQR] | 1.8 [1.2–3.7] |
| Mechanical ventilation period (days), median [IQR] | 2.1 [0.9–4.2] |
| Hospital length of stay (days), median [IQR] | 16.9 [9.3–36.1] |
| Ambulatory at discharge, | 184 (79%) |
| In-hospital mortality, | 11 (4.7%) |
| Discharged to | |
| Home, | 138 (60%) |
| Another hospital or rehabilitation center, | 72 (31%) |
| Nursing home, | 11 (4.7%) |
Data in table are presented as the median with the interquartile range or as a number with percentage in total patients
BMI body mass index, IQR interquartile range, ICU intensive care unit, APACHE Acute Physiology and Chronic Health Evaluation, SOFA Sequential Organ Failure Assessment, ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
Rehabilitation sessions and adverse events
| Total number of sessions performed | Adverse events, | Total number of patients ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rehabilitation level | |||
| Level 1, | 154 | 1 (0.60%) | 73 |
| Level 2 | |||
| Total, | 46 | 1 (2.2%) | 26 |
| Ergometer, | 10 | 0 (0%) | 4 |
| Level 3, | 169 | 7 (4.1%) | 74 |
| Level 4, | 54 | 0 (0%) | 18 |
| Level 5 | |||
| Total, | 164 | 4 (2.4%) | 83 |
| Standing or marching at bedside, | 103 | 4 (3.9%) | 42 |
| Ambulating in the ICU, | 61 | 0 (0%) | 49 |
| Active rehabilitation, | 387 | 11 (2.8%) | 143 |
| Total Rehabilitation sessions, n | 587 | 13 (2.2%) | |
Data are presented as number (%)
ICU intensive care unit
aThis demonstrates the number of the patients who experienced the each rehabilitation levels
Type and frequency of adverse events
| Adverse events ( | Event rate per 1000 rehabilitation sessions | |
|---|---|---|
| Event | ||
| Patient intolerancea | 7 (54%) | 12 |
| Symptomatic orthostatic hypotension | 6 (46%) | 10 |
| Fall to knees or ground | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Asynchrony with mechanical ventilation | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Tachycardia or bradycardia | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Arrhythmia | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Myocardial infraction associated symptom | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Tachypnea or bradypnea | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Desaturation | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Cardiopulmonary arrest | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Bleeding | 0 (0%) | 0 |
| Inadvertent removal of medical devices | 0 (0%) | 0 |
Data are presented as number of occurrences with percentage
A total of 587 rehabilitation sessions were performed during the study period
aPatients’ intolerance includes five episodes of extreme exhaustion and two episodes of exacerbation of abdominal pain in patients diagnosed with acute pancreatitis. There is no scale for exhaustion or pain
Relation between medical devices and adverse events.
| Total number of sessions performed | Adverse events, | |
|---|---|---|
| Medical devices in place during the session | ||
| Peripheral venous catheter, | 582 | 13 (2.2%) |
| Arterial line | ||
| Total, | 574 | 13 (2.3%) |
| Radial, | 568 | 13 (2.3%) |
| Femoral, | 6 | 0 (0%) |
| Central venous catheter | ||
| Total, | 167 | 8 (4.8%) |
| Jugular, | 112 | 5 (4.5%) |
| Subclavian, | 18 | 0 (0%) |
| Femoral, | 37 | 3 (8.1%) |
| Hemodialysis catheter | ||
| Total, | 105 | 1 (1.0%) |
| Jugular, | 96 | 1 (1.0%) |
| Femoral, | 11 | 0 (0%) |
| Mechanical ventilator, | 293 | 7 (2.4%) |
| Endotracheal tube, | 183 | 5 (2.7%) |
| Tracheostomy tube, | 127 | 3 (2.4%) |
| ECMO cannula, | ||
| Total, | 110 | 4 (3.6%) |
| Jugular, | 110 | 4 (3.6%) |
| Femoral, | 110 | 4 (3.6%) |
| Feeding tube, | 419 | 10 (2.4%) |
| Urinary catheter, | 550 | 12 (2.2%) |
| Chest tube, | 83 | 3 (3.6%) |
| Abdominal drain, | 112 | 2 (1.8%) |
| Total rehabilitation sessions | 587 | 13 (2.2%) |
Data are presented as number (%)
ECMO extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
Fig. 3The percentage of sessions where personnel were involved at each rehabilitation session level. ICU intensive care unit. a The 5% means that nurses participated in the passive transfer to chair. b The 21% means that ICU physicians participated in the ergometer with ECMO devices to monitor ECMO cannula. c Active rehabilitation level includes levels 3 to 5
Outcomes of protocolized rehabilitation
| All study patients ( | Subgroup in the ICU ≧ 72 h ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Variable | Values median [IQR] or number (%) | Values median [IQR] or number (%) |
| Patients who could get out of bed, | 143 (62%) | 58 (82%) |
| Patients who could stand during ICU stay, | 82 (35%) | 31 (45%) |
| Patients who could ambulate during ICU stay, | 49 (21%) | 12 (17%) |
| Days to first rehabilitation session (days), median [IQR]a | 0.7 [0.0–0.9] | 1.0 [0.8–2.0] |
| Days to first out of bed (days), median [IQR]a | 1.2 [0.1–2.0] | 2.0 [1.4–3.6] |
| Days to first standing (days), median [IQR]a | 1.2 [0.8–2.1] | 2.8 [1.7–4.9] |
| Days to first ambulating (days), median [IQR]a | 1.0 [0.7–1.7] | 2.3 [1.2–2.9] |
Data in table are presented as the median with the interquartile range or as a number with percentage in total patients
IQR interquartile range, ICU intensive care unit
aDays counted from the time of ICU admission