| Literature DB >> 35200688 |
Christos Kourek1, Serafim Nanas1, Anastasia Kotanidou1, Vasiliki Raidou1, Maria Dimopoulou1, Stamatis Adamopoulos2, Andreas Karabinis3, Stavros Dimopoulos1,3.
Abstract
The aim of this qualitative systematic review is to summarize and analyze the different modalities of exercise training and its potential effects in patients on extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) support. ECMO is an outbreaking, life-saving technology of the last decades which is being used as a gold standard treatment in patients with severe cardiac, respiratory or combined cardiorespiratory failure. Critically ill patients on ECMO very often present intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICU-AW); thus, leading to decreased exercise capacity and increased mortality rates. Early mobilization and physical therapy have been proven to be safe and feasible in critically ill patients on ECMO, either as a bridge to lung/heart transplantation or as a bridge to recovery. Rehabilitation has beneficial effects from the early stages in the ICU, resulting in the prevention of ICU-AW, and a decrease in episodes of delirium, the duration of mechanical ventilation, ICU and hospital length of stay, and mortality rates. It also improves functional ability, exercise capacity, and quality of life. Rehabilitation requires a very careful, multi-disciplinary approach from a highly specialized team from different specialties. Initial risk assessment and screening, with appropriate physical therapy planning and exercise monitoring in patients receiving ECMO therapy are crucial factors for achieving treatment goals. However, more randomized controlled trials are required in order to establish more appropriate individualized exercise training protocols.Entities:
Keywords: assessment; early mobilization; exercise training; extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO); intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICU-AW); rehabilitation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200688 PMCID: PMC8875180 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9020034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Studies including mobilization in ECMO patients—sample size, intervention characteristics, outcomes, main results and complications.
| Study | Sample | Intervention | Frequency and | Outcomes | Main results | Complications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Turner DA et al., 2011, | Patient 1: with respiratory failure (cystic fibrosis) on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation | Strengthening and reconditioning exercises in the supine position (ankle pumps, heel slides, upper extremity stretching, and range of motion exercises) Exercises in the sitting position On the edge of the bed to strengthen the torso, upper extremities, and lower extremities (leg lifts, ankle rolls, and arm lifts) Exercises in the standing position and ambulation | Patient 1 → 1 week | Lung transplantation | Successful bilateral orthotopic lung transplantation and weaning from ECMO | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Lowman GD et al., 2012 | 1 patient with severe acute respiratory failure due to a cystic fibrosis exacerbation on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation |
Therapeutic out-of-bed exercises (sitting on the edge-of-bed, steps to transfer to/from a chair) Manual therapy Integumentary protection techniques Airway clearance techniques | 9 days | Survival to lung transplantation | Successful bilateral orthotopic lung transplantation | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Rahimi RA et al., 2013 | Patient 1: respiratory failure (worsening dyspnea and persistent right pneumothorax) on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation |
Supine therapeutic exercises Active in-bed cycling Sitting at the edge of the bed with assistance 30 min of active, in-bed cycling | 12 days | Lung transplantation | Successful right orthotopic lung transplantation | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Rehder KJ et al., 2013 | 4 out of 9 patients with end-stage lung disease on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation | Stretching and resisted exercises, sitting, standing, and ambulation (mean distance of 780 m) | 5 days | Unknown |
↓ in the mechanical ventilation time after transplantation ↓ in total length of hospital and ICU after transplantation 1-year survival 100% | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Abrams D et al., 2014 | 35 out of 100 consecutive patients on ECMO underwent active physical therapy →
19 of them as bridge to transplantation (16 on VV-ECMO and 3 on VA-ECMO) 16 of them as bridge to recovery (15 on VV-ECMO and 1 on VA-ECMO) |
Bed-level active-assisted range of motion Sitting in bed Sitting at the edge of the bed Standing Ambulation | 7.2 ± 6.5 sessions in total per patient |
Survival to transplantation or discharge Discharge disposition among survivors Critical safety events |
Of the 16 bridge to recovery patients → 14 (88%) survived to discharge. 10 out of 19 bridge to transplantation patients (53%) survived to transplantation → 9 (90%) of these 10 patients survived to discharge Improvement in functional capacity Other: no overall difference in mean ECMO blood flow rates or sweep gas flow rates | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Cork G et al., 2014 | 1 patient with severe respiratory failure due to Influenza A (H1N1) on VV-ECMO | Chest physiotherapy (positioning, ventilator hyperinflation, expiratory chest wall shaking and suctioning) | 2 to 3 times daily for 13 days | Unknown |
Successful weaning from ECMO support Improved secretion clearance and pulmonary recovery | Unknown |
| Morris K et al., 2014 | A 46-year-old woman with |
Passive mobilization Bedside sitting Active exercises | Unknown | Unknown |
Desaturation during the intervention managed by increasing the blood flow in ECMO No other complications related to cannulation and normal cardiac response to exercise (increase in heart rate and systolic blood pressure) | |
| Pruijsten R et al., 2014 | 6 patients with respiratory failure on VV-ECMO | Exercises ranging room exercising in bed to walking outside the room | 4–17 days | Unknown |
No cannulas’ dislocation 4 patients successfully bridged to bilateral lung transplantation Other: 4 patients were able to stand and walk a short distance up to 100 m 2 patients could sit upright with both legs hanging outside of the bed | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Hermens JAJM et al., 2015 | 9 awake, non-intubated patients with end-stage lung disease on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation |
Extensive sputum mobilization Muscle training of the lower extremities (dynamic quadriceps training by leg press, bed bike or squats from sitting position) Bed-to-chair mobilization | Unknown | Muscle strength (Medical Research Council -MRC) |
↑ in lower body muscle strength [mean MRC from 3.75 (range 3–4) before training to 4.25 (range 4–5) 1 day before transplantation] Other: 4 patients successfully bridged to lung transplantation 5 patients did not survive to transplantation |
1 patient with large rectus hematoma 1 patient with obstructing thrombus in the return cannula |
| Kikukawa T et al., 2015 | A 54-year-old man with H1N1 influenza-associated respiratory failure and severe obesity on VV-ECMO | Respiratory therapy and bedside sitting | 3 days | Unknown |
Improvement in respiratory function Successful decannulation on ICU 3 days after physical therapy Discharge from the ICU 5 days after physical therapy Discharged from the hospital with no severe disability | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Ko Y et al., 2015 | 8 patients on ECMO: 7 patients on VV-ECMO → 2 of them as a bridge to recovery and 5 as a bridge to lung transplantation 1 patient on VA-ECMO as a bridge to heart transplantation |
31 sessions (50%) of passive range of motion and electrical muscle stimulation 17 sessions (27.4%) sitting in bed or on the edge of bed 2 sessions (3.2%) strengthening in sitting 11 sessions (18%) standing or marching in place 1 session (2%) walking | 62 sessions | Safety events during physical therapy and interruptions due to unstable vital signs |
Three sessions (5%) were stopped due to tachycardia ( Improvement in functionality and fitness | |
| Kulkarni T et al., 2015 | A 36-year-old man with status asthmaticus on VV-ECMO | Active rehabilitation and ambulation (800 feet/day) | 2 days | Unknown |
Successful weaning from ECMO 2 days after rehabilitation Hospital discharge 5 days after rehabilitation | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Pastva A et al., 2015 | A 30-year-old woman with cystic fibrosis and respiratory failure due to severe pneumonia on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation |
Functional electrical stimulation cycling in quadriceps, hamstrings, and buttocks bilaterally Progressive mobilization | 7 functional electrical stimulation sessions (2 pre and 5 post transplantation) for over 18 days | Efficacy of functional electrical stimulation before and after bilateral orthotopic lung transplantation |
Maintenance of the muscle mass of the rectus femoris (1.5–1.6 cm) and vastus intermedius (0.95–1.15 cm) during hospitalization Increase in muscle mass after hospital discharge of more than 2 cm in both muscles Improvement in muscle strength at ICU discharge (MRC sum score of 58/60 and hand grip strength of 60 pounds) | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| 5 out of 9 patients with respiratory failure on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation | Active physical rehabilitation and ambulation | Unknown | Economic impact of ambulatory versus non-ambulatory ECMO strategies |
↓ by 22% in total hospital cost, by 73% in post-transplant ICU cost and by 11% in total cost in ambulatory ECMO patients compared with non-ambulatory ECMO subject Other: Lower length of mechanical ventilation before transplantation and higher ECMO support in ambulatory ECMO patients Shorter length of mechanical ventilation and ICU stay after transplantation in ambulatory ECMO patients | Unknown | |
| Boling B et al., 2016 | 18 patients with severe respiratory failure on VV-ECMO |
Physical therapy Range of motion at the bedside Ambulation in the hospital | Unknown | Unknown |
8 patients (44%) received a transplant and survived to discharge Rest of the patients (10): 4 out o were successfully weaned from VV-ECMO 6 died | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Keibun R. 2016 | 10 awake and 13 non-awake patients with refractory acute respiratory failure on VV-ECMO as a bridge to recovery (23 patients out of 31 who survived to ICU discharge) | Active rehabilitation | Unknown | Unknown |
Shorter length of stay in the ICU (13.6 vs. 21.7 days) in awake compared to non-awake ECMO patients Shorter hospital stay (41.9 vs. 60.0 days) in awake compared to non-awake ECMO patients Better improvement in the self-ambulation rate at discharge (70% vs. 38.5%) in awake compared to non-awake ECMO patients Reduction in the total cost ($673,000 vs. $814,000) in awake compared to non-awake ECMO patients | Unknown |
| Norrenberg M et al., 2016 | 10 patients with respiratory or cardiac failure on ECMO (5 on VV-ECMO and 5 on VA-ECMO) | Mobilization of all joints except for the limb used for ECMO cannulation | Unknown | Unknown | 4 deaths (40%) | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Munshi L et al., 2017 | 61 ARDS patients on ECMO out of 107 as a bridge to recovery (57 on VV-ECMO and 4 on VA-ECMO) → 50 patients of them underwent physiotherapy while 11 did not (47 on VV-ECMO and 3 on VA-ECMO) |
Passive ROM Active ROM Sitting Standing According to ICU Mobility Scale | Unknown |
Association between ICU physiotherapy and ICU mortality Factors associated with a higher intensity activity score |
Association with ICU mortality ( ICU physiotherapy (OR 0.19; 95% CI 0.04–0.98) APACHE II (OR 1.13; 95% CI 1.01–1.26) Sex (OR 8.4; 95% CI (1.71–41.7) No clinical characteristics were independently associated with the intensity of ICU physiotherapy except for SAS | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Salam S et al., 2017 | A 50-year-old man with severe ARDS on VV-ECMO as a bridge to lung transplantation |
Active exercises with elastic bands Mini-leg press Bedside sitting Ambulation | 125 days | Lung transplantation |
Improvement in fitness before lung transplantation Successful bilateral lung transplantation after 125 days on ECMO | Cannula fracture during ambulation |
| Shudo Y et al., 2018 | 1 patient on VA-ECMO while awaiting en-bloc heart-lung transplantation |
45-degree tilt and 40% weight-bearing for 30 min in the first day Full tilt and weight bearing for 30 min after 7 days Step off and ambulate several feet at bedside with assistance after 10 days Ambulation for 30 min with minimal assistance and strengthening exercises after 14 days | 19 days | Unknown |
Successful en-bloc heart-lung transplantation after 19 days Hospital discharge 12 days after transplantation | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Wells CL et al., 2018 | 167 out of 254 patients on ECMO (98 on VV-ECMO and 69 on VA-ECMO) |
Therapeutic exercises (range of motion, stretching and strengthening exercises, muscle endurance, breathing exercises) Bed mobility (rolling, supine to sit transfer training, bridging activities) Edge of bed activities (sitting balance, posture, pre-standing activities, breathing and coughing) Sit to stand transfer activities (sit to standing transfers and functional strengthening using sit to stand from the bed or chair) Stand pivot transfers (pivot or taking small steps from the bed or chair with purpose to transfer to another surface) Standing activities (standing balance and tolerance, strengthening, weight shifting, marching, and stepping in place) Ambulation (gait training, gait speed, ambulation tolerance) | 268 interventions |
Discharge disposition Adverse events | 109 survivors out of 167 patients (65%) | 3 minor events (< 0.5%) → 2 episodes of arrhythmias (non-sustained ventricular tachycardia) and 1 hypotension event |
| Pasrija C et al., 2019 | 15 out of 104 patients with decompensated heart failure and pulmonary embolism on VA-ECMO |
Motor strength exercises (moving to the chair or walking) | Unknown | Safety and |
3 minor bleeding events (20%) 100% in-hospital survival | |
| Braune S et al., 2020 | 43 out of 115 critically ill patients on ECLS with IMS ≥ 3 (12 on VV-ECMO, 17 on VA-ECMO, 7 on VV-ECCO2R, 3 on AV-ECCO2R and 4 on RVAD) |
Functional strengthening Breathing exercises Active upper and lower limb exercises Endurance exercises Progressing functional mobility | 332 mobilizations | Complications during mobilization |
3 out of 43 (6.9%) patients with bleeding from cannulation site requiring transfusion and/or surgery 1 episode (0.3%) of femoral cannula displacement during mobilization on VA-ECMO patient | |
| Mark A et al., 2020 | 1 pregnant woman with acute respiratory failure due to COVID-19 on VV-ECMO |
In-bed active-assisted range-of motion exercises such as sitting at the bedside and standing Out-of-bed activities including standing at the bedside, strength of standing force, pregait exercises | 6 days | Unknown | Successful hospital discharge | 1 episode of hypotension (mild dyspnea with activity and lightheadedness) |
| McCormack PF et al., 2020 | 3 patients on VV-ECMO | 30-min active NMES session delivered to the quadriceps (biphasic, symmetric impulses of 45 Hz, with 400 μs pulse duration, 12 s on and 6 s off) and 30-min sham session (intensity at the minimum value of 1–5 mA, without palpable contractions) | 30 min/session | Pedal perfusion assessed via a combination of |
Minimal change in pedal perfusion during NMES in 2 patients ↑ in pedal perfusion during NMES on the LSCI data in 1 patient | No rehabilitation-related complications |
| Mao L et al., 2021 | 1 patient with severe COVID-19 after bilateral lung transplantation on VV-ECMO |
Ventilation in the prone position → 12 h each day for 3 consecutive days Ventilation in the supine position → 30 min each time, 4 times a day Breathing training → 10 min each time, 2 times a day Airway clearance technique → active breathing techniques once every hour Exercise training → thoracic expansion exercises Endurance training → bedside cycle ergometer for 20–30 min a day with moderate to slightly high intensity Strength training → 6 to 10 RM weight training of the upper and lower limbs for 10–30 min, once or twice a day initially and 3 to 4 times a day later Transfer training from the bed to the bedside, from the bedside to a chair, and from the chair to the bed repeatedly for 30 min each time, 2 times a day Daily therapeutic bronchoscopy | 2 days on ECMO (then ECMO was removed and the patient continued rehabilitation without ECMO) | Discharge from ECMO | Successfully removal of ECMO one day after rehabilitation | No rehabilitation-related complications |
ICU, intensive care unit; IMS, intensive care unit mobility scale; ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; VA, veno-arterial; VV, veno-venous; ECLS, extracorporeal life support; VV-ECCO2R, veno-venous extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal; AV-ECCO2R, arterio-venous extracorporeal carbon dioxide removal; RVAD, right ventricular assist device; NMES, neuromuscular electrical stimulation; HIT, heparin induced thrombocytopenia; SAS, sedation agitation scale; ROM, range of motion; RM, repetition maximum.
Figure 1Screening and assessment of critically ill patients on ECMO support prior, during and after rehabilitation [48]. ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; RASS, Richmond Agitation and Sedation Scale; RR, respiratory rate; DVT, deep vein thrombosis; PE, pulmonary embolism; ICU, intensive care unit.
Figure 2Tools for assessment of functional status in critically ill patients on ECMO support [79]. ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; ICU, intensive care unit.
Modalities of exercise training, proposed protocols, and suggested candidates.
| Modality of Exercise | Proposed Exercise Protocol * | Suggested Candidates |
|---|---|---|
|
| Airway clearance techniques Ventilation in prone and supine position In-bed active-assisted range-of motion exercises: Sitting at the bedside; Standing balance and tolerance; Rolling; Stretching; Positioning in bed; Strengthening and reconditioning exercises in the supine position including ankle pumps, heel slides and upper extremity stretching; Bedside cycling (passive/active) for 15 min (3 sets of 5–10 min with 1 min recovery); Inspiratory muscle training; Out-of-bed activities; Standing at the bedside; Strength of standing force; Sitting on the edge of the bed; Transfer from bed to chair; Exercises in the sitting position on the edge of the bed including leg lifts, ankle rolls, and arm lifts (strength training); Aerobic training (cycle ergometer/treadmill) for 10–20 min; Inspiratory muscle training. |
Patients with severe acute or end-stage respiratory failure on ECMO support as a bridge to lung transplantation. Patients with severe acute or end-stage heart failure on ECMO support as a bridge to heart transplantation. |
|
| 1 to 3 sets of 8 to 10 repetitions of 5 active range of motion and resistance exercises such as leg press, squats from sitting position; 15–30 min of active cycling with moderate to slightly high intensity; Mobilization in a standing position and walking; Respiratory rehabilitation and breathing exercises for 2 sets of 10 min per set; Functional electrical stimulation of the lower limb muscles; Inspiratory muscle training. Passive mobilization via stretching, splinting and passive movements; Continuous passive motion; Functional electrical stimulation of the lower limb muscles; Passive cycling for 20 min. |
Patients with severe acute or end-stage respiratory failure on ECMO support as a bridge to lung transplantation. Patients with severe acute or end-stage heart failure on ECMO support as a bridge to heart transplantation. Patients with respiratory or heart failure on ECMO support as a bridge to recovery. |
|
| Functional electrical stimulation cycling in quadriceps, hamstrings, and buttocks bilaterally; 30-min active NMES per session; Biphasic, symmetric impulses of 45–75 Hz, with 300–400 μs pulse duration, 6 s on and 12 s off (intensity to a maximum of 140 mA). | All patients on ECMO support, especially patients with lower level of consciousness. |
* Selection of exercises (in-bed or out-of-bed, passive or active) should be individualized for each patient according to his/her consciousness level, functional status and disease severity. Workload, number of repetitions and number of sets in strength training depend on the physical status of each patient: 1 to 3 sets of 8 to 10 repetitions of 5 active range for patients with better physical status and 3 to 5 sets of 8 to 10 repetitions of 5 passive range for patients with worse physical status or disability for active rehabilitation is suggested. Workload should be based on the 1 RM test for active exercises (40–60% of the 1 RM test) if feasible. Moderate intensity of aerobic exercise training, either on a cycle ergometer or a treadmill, aimed for 12–13 on the Borg scale is suggested for prehabilitation or early mobilization in patients with higher severity and lower functional capacity while moderate to slightly high intensity is suggested for early mobilization in patients with better functional status. Inspiratory muscle training should be prescribed once or twice daily, with 3–5 sets of 6 inspiratory efforts at the intensity of 30–60% of maximum inspiratory pressure progressively increased. ECMO, extracorporeal membrane oxygenation; NMES, neuromuscular electrical stimulation; ICU-AW, intensive care unit acquired weakness; MAP, mean arterial pressure; SAP, systolic arterial pressure; HR, heart rate.