| Literature DB >> 33888128 |
Djahid Kennouche1, Eric Luneau1, Guillaume Y Millet1,2, Julien Gondin3, Thomas Lapole1, Jérome Morel1,4.
Abstract
Around one third of intensive care unit (ICU) patients will develop severe neuromuscular alterations, known as intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW), during their stay. The diagnosis of ICUAW is difficult and often delayed as a result of sedation or delirium. Indeed, the clinical evaluation of both Medical Research Council score and maximal voluntary force (e.g., using handgrip and/or handheld dynamometers), two independent predictors of mortality, can be performed only in awake and cooperative patients. Transcutaneous electrical/magnetic stimulation applied over motor nerves combined with the development of dedicated ergometer have recently been introduced in ICU patients in order to propose an early and non-invasive measurement of evoked force. The aim of this narrative review is to summarize the different tools allowing bedside force evaluation in ICU patients and the related experimental protocols. We suggest that non-invasive electrical and/or magnetic evoked force measurements could be a relevant strategy to characterize muscle weakness in the early phase of ICU and diagnose ICUAW.Entities:
Keywords: Electrical stimulation; Ergometers; Intensive care unit-acquired weakness; Magnetic stimulation; Skeletal muscle function
Year: 2021 PMID: 33888128 PMCID: PMC8063302 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-021-03567-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Inter-investigator reliability measurements of MRC sum-score
| References | Number of patients | Number of investigators | ICC (95% CI—range) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hermans et al. [ | 75 | 2 | 0.95 (0.92–0.97) |
| Hough et al. [ | 30 | 2 | 0.83 (0.67–0.93) |
| Kleyweg et al. [ | 60 | 2 | 0.97 (0.96–0.98) |
| Fan et al. [ | 10 | 19 | 0.99 (0.98–1.00) |
| Connolly et al. [ | 20 | 2 | 0.94 (0.85–0.98) |
Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (ICC) and their 95% Confidence Interval (CI) are reported
Fig. 1Overview of the different methods and tools used to diagnose intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW) and to quantify voluntary (with HG strength < 7 kg for females and < 11 kg for males) and evoked force in sedated and awake/cooperative ICU patients. ES: electrical stimulation; HG: Handgrip dynamometer; HHD: Handheld dynamometer; MRC: Medical Research Council; MS: magnetic stimulation; MVC: maximal voluntary contraction force; Tw: twitch; VA: voluntary activation (index of neural drive). All the data are derived from references reported in Tables 3 and 4 and are expressed as a percentage of values recorded in healthy subjects (i.e. control/predictive)
Main outcomes from studies measuring voluntary force with handheld (HHD) and handgrip (HG) dynamometers in ICU patients
| References | Number of patients | % Men | Age (years) | Ventilation duration (days) | ICU LOS (days) | Disease severity | Scoring system | Method | Testing session (days) | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ali et al. [ | 35 with ICUAW 101without ICUAW | 40 50.5 | 59.5 57.1 | 21 12 | 66 | APACHE III | HG (seated) | N/A | Handgrip cutoffs values for ICUAW diagnostic: 7 kg for women, 11 kg for men | |
| Vanpee et al. [ | 39 + 12 (retest) | 62 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | HHD | N/A | Absolute force for shoulder abduction: 74 N; elbow flexion: 75–79 N; wrist extension: 61–62 N; hip flexion: 112–119 N; knee extension: 85–94 N; ankle dorsiflexion: 57–80 N No gender difference for force loss | |
| Hermans et al. [ | 46 | 59 | N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | HG (seated) | 15 | HG absolute force for right hand: 11 kg for women | |
| Parry et al. [ | 60 | 58 | APACHE II | HG (supine) | HG absolute median force values were 20 kg and 0 kg in men and women, respectively 27% of patients had a grip force of 0 kg (majority of women with n = 14/16) | |||||
| Schmidt et al. [ | 28 with ICUAW 22 without ICUAW | 39 50 | 58 49 | N/A | 77 66 | APACHE IV | HG (seated) | N/A | Definition of new HG cutoff values (4 kg and 7 kg in women and men, respectively) to diagnose ICUAW as compared with EMG measurements HG absolute force values were lower in patients with ICUAW as compared with patients without ICUAW (2.5 | |
| Cottereau et al. [ | 3 groups: 41 33 10 | 37 60 10 | SAPS II | HG (seated) | First SBT: | Absolute HG force values were of 20; 12 and 6 kg at day 4; 8, and 12 of SBT, respectively Relative HG force values were of 30; 29 and 25% at day 4; 8, and 12 of SBT, respectively (normative database of Bohannon et al. [ | ||||
| Borges et al. [ | 72 | 36 | 53 | 7.5 | 10 | 20 | APACHE II | HHD (quadriceps) + HG (seated) | Hospital discharge | Quadriceps and HG relative values were: 51% and 55% (Normative database of Hogrel et al. [ |
| Bragança et al. [ | 45 | 60 | 55 | SAPS III | HG (seated) | N/A | ICUAW patients had lower HG absolute force values as compared with patients without ICUAW (4 HG cutoff values [ | |||
| Sidiras et al. [ | 36 with ICUAW 92 without ICUAW | 42 74 | 58 51 | APACHE II | HG (seated) | ICU and hospital discharge | ICUAW patients are weaker than patients without ICUAW at both ICU and hospital discharge (3 Women had lower HG relative force values at ICU and hospital discharge as compared with men | |||
| Borges & Soriano [ | 37 | 54 | 53 | 56 | SAPS III | HG (seated) | HG absolute force values were of 12 and 19 kg at day 3 and hospital discharge, respectively HG relative values were of 37% | |||
| Burtin et al. [ | 90 | 72 | 57 | N/A | N/A | 25 | APACHE II | HHD + HG (supine) | ICU and hospital discharge | No significant difference for quadriceps force (normalized to body weight) measured with HHD between ICU and hospital discharge: 1.86 N.kg−1 and 2.03 N.kg−1 |
| Baldwin et al. [ | 17 | 59 | 20 | APACHE II | HHD + HG (supine) | HG, elbow flexion and knee extension absolute force values for right side were: 11; 9 and 11 kg, respectively | ||||
| Baldwin & Bersten [ | 16 | 56 | 62 | 94 | APACHE III | HHD + HG (supine) | HG, elbow flexion and knee extension absolute force values for right side were 11; 9 and 8 kg, respectively | |||
| Chlan et al. [ | 120 | 49 | N/A | N/A | 61 | APACHE III | HG (supine) | Mean HG force was 3.2 kg (ranging from 0 to 54 kg) with 6 patients having a force of 0 kg No force improvement was observed over time under MV | ||
| Dietrich et al. [ | 253 | 52 50 | < 80 > 80 | 8 6.5 | 14 | APACHE II | HG (seated) | 1–5 after ICU discharge | HG absolute force (dominant, non-dominant): 20 and 18 kg for patients < 80 years | |
| Samosawala et al. [ | 64 | 64 | N/A | 9.6 | N/A | N/A | HHD | 3; 5 and 7 | Absolute force decreased by 11.8% between day 3 and 7 | |
| Morris et al. [ | 300 | 45 | 56 | N/A | 76 | APACHE III | HHD + HG (seated) | ICU and hospital discharge | HHD and HG absolute values at ICU and hospital discharge were: 9.9 kg and 10.4 kg | |
| Segaran et al. [ | 44 | 78 | APACHE II | HG (seated) | N/A | HG measurements not feasible due to a lack of alertness (assessed by 4 questions), weakness and poly-trauma |
EMG electromyography, LOS length of stay, HHD handheld dynamometer, HG handgrip, ICU intense care unit, ICUAW intense care unit-acquired weakness, MV mechanical ventilation, NO no ICUAW, SBT spontaneous breathing trial; (II), (III), (IV): Score acute physiology and chronic health evaluation II, III, IV; SAPS: Simplified acute physiology scores II, III. Median values are underlined
Main outcomes from studies measuring evoked force in ICU patients
| References | Muscle | Stimulation technique | Number of patients (controls) | Duration of ICU stay or MV$ (days [range]) | Main results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Finn et al. [ | Adductor Pollicis | ES | 44 (26) | 9.5 [0–38] | F10/F50* ratio was higher in patients than in controls |
| Harris et al. [ | ES & MS | 12 (38) | 18.5 [1–89] | Force was 40% lower in patients as compared with controls | |
| Eikermann et al. [ | ES | 13 (7) | 13.5 [5–23]$ | Force was 69% lower in patients as compared with controls | |
| Connolly et al. [ | ES | 21 | 13 [9–25] | Force was lower within the 24 h of admission in patients as compared with control values obtained in healthy subjects Force remained unchanged when recorded 7 days after the initial measurements | |
| Ginz et al. [ | Ankle Dorsiflexors | ES | 19 (20) | 7 [N/A] | Force was 20–40% lower in patients as compared with controls |
| Ginz et al. [ | ES | 8 | 5 [2–10] | Force decreased during the ICU stay and recovered after weaning of MV in ICU survivors | |
| Silva et al. [ | Quadriceps | ES# | 30 (30) | 23 [15–26] | Force decreased by ~ 25 and ~ 36% after 14 days of MV |
| Laghi et al. [ | MS | 12 (50) | 9.9 [1–22]$ | Force was 54% lower in patients as compared with controls | |
| Vivodtzev et al. [ | MS | 13 (8) | 7 [N/A] | Force was 75% lower in patients as compared with controls |
*F10/F50: ratio between the forces produced by a 10 Hz stimulation train to the force produced by a 50 Hz stimulation train
#Electrical stimulation was applied over the quadriceps muscle belly; ES: electrical stimulation; MS: magnetic stimulation; MV: mechanical ventilation; N/A: Not available
Fig. 2Typical handgrip (a) and handheld (b) dynamometers/ergometers used to record evoked-force on adductor pollicis (c, adapted from Harris et al. [13]), ankle dorsiflexors (d, adapted from Ginz et al. [56, 60]) and quadriceps (e, adapted from Laghi et al. [58])
Inter-investigator reliability of force measurements performed with handgrip and handheld dynamometers in ICU patients
| References | Patients | Handgrip | Handheld | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right | Left | Shoulder abduction | Elbow Flexion | Wrist extension | Hip flexion | Knee extension | Ankle dorsiflexion | ||
| Vanpee et al. [ | 39 | 0.91 (0.85–0.95) | 0.96 (0.93–0.98) | 0.94 (0.91–0.97) | 0.80 (0.67–0.89) | 0.94 (0.90–0.97) | 0.76 (0.33–0.90) | ||
| Hermans et al. [ | 46 | 0.93 (0.86–0.97) | 0.97 (0.94–0.98) | ||||||
| Parry et al. [ | 29 | 0.97 (0.90–0.99)W | 0.94 (0.82–0.98)W | ||||||
| 0.88 (0.70–0.96)M | 0.97 (0.91–0.99)M | ||||||||
| Baldwin et al. [ | 15 | 0.92 (0.68–0.98) | 0.89 (0.54–0.97) | 0.71 (− 0.21 to 0.93)R | 0.84 (0.52–0.95)R | ||||
| 0.62 (− 0.30 to 0.90)L | 0.79 (0.34–0.93) L | ||||||||
Intraclass Correlation Coefficients (and their 95% Confidence Interval) are reported
W women, M men, R right, L left
Fig. 3Evoked force recorded in ICU patients (expressed in percentage of control values obtained in healthy subjects) on three different muscle groups: adductor pollicis (AP), ankle dorsiflexors (AD) and quadriceps femoris (QF). Data were extracted from each respective study