Intensive Care Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Pilot Observational Cohort Study Examining the Feasibility of Measuring Energy Expenditure During Physical Rehabilitation In Critically Ill Patients
Many patients who are admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) experience muscle weakness.
This muscle weakness occurs whilst patients are unconscious, immobile in bed and on a
breathing machine (ventilator). It can develop very quickly, as soon as they become unwell.
The investigators know that this weakness can make it harder for patients to regain their
normal level of functional ability, such as standing and walking independently. Physical
rehabilitation, delivered by physiotherapists, is important for patients as they recover
from their critical illness to help them regain strength and to practice the ability to
perform physical activities. These activities include sitting on the edge of the bed,
standing, stepping on the spot and walking.
However it is difficult to know how hard it is for patients who are recovering from critical
illness to perform these types of activities - in other words, how much energy is required.
Some patients may find certain activities harder or easier than others. By knowing the
energy requirements of patients whilst they take part in different physical rehabilitation
activities, physiotherapists may be able to be more accurate with prescribing exercises and
designing rehabilitation sessions for patients to practice achieving those activities.
In this study, the investigators will measure the energy requirements of the patients when
they take part in physiotherapy-led physical rehabilitation they will have during their
admission. To do this, the investigators will use a different ventilator to the one normally
used to help their breathing. This ventilator works in exactly the same way, but has an
extra component built into it to measure energy requirements. After the rehabilitation
session, the patient will return to using their normal ventilator.
Admission to the intensive care unit (ICU) with critical illness is typically associated
with profound physical impairments including peripheral skeletal muscle wasting and
dysfunction. These effects demonstrate a rapid onset from the point of ICU admission, affect
those with higher illness acuity to greater levels, and contribute to the development of
intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICU-AW) defined as severe upper and lower limb muscle
weakness. Clinically patients present with significant limitations in exercise capacity and
performance of physical functional activities, with deficits persisting for many years
following resolution of the original illness.
Physical rehabilitation is recommended to address the physical and functional deficits
associated with ICU-AW, and delivery is advocated across the continuum of the patient
recovery pathway, commencing whilst in the ICU, following transfer to the ward and beyond
hospital discharge. Physical rehabilitation within the ICU typically incorporates early
mobilisation (EM), characterised by a hierarchical progression of increasingly functional
activities such as active-assisted bed exercises, sitting-on-the-edge-of-the-bed (SOEOB),
standing, marching-on-the-spot and walking. These activities are summarised in the ICU
Mobility Scale. In recent years, adjunctive technologies including electrical muscle
stimulation, interactive video-games and passive cycle ergometry have also been utilised.
Delivery of early mobilisation is feasible, safe and effective in improving both short and
long-term outcomes in critically ill patients even in the early stages of recovery whilst
patients remain ventilated and receiving other forms of organ support. However, the optimum
'dose' of physical rehabilitation to deliver to patients whilst in the ICU remains
undetermined. Early mobilisation reflects a clinically pragmatic approach to patient
management, but there are few data to support the intensity, frequency and timing of
interventions.
Furthermore, there is little known of the acute physiological response to undertaking this
type of exercise in this patient population. Metabolic monitoring can provide information on
the energy expenditure of patients. However, direct methods of data acquisition such as use
of pulmonary artery catheters to measure whole-body oxygen consumption can be unreliable and
their use in clinical practice has diminished in recent years. The non-invasive technique of
indirect calorimetry (IC) has therefore emerged as a potential alternative that may be more
practically applicable in the clinical setting. Indirect calorimetry measures total gas
exchange, oxygen consumption and carbon dioxide production which can in turn determine
energy expenditure. However the widespread clinical utility of the IC technique, can be
offset by the number of clinical factors that may preclude its use across all patients e.g.
those with cardiovascular or ventilator instability, those with open chest drainage or
receiving renal haemofiltration.
Two studies to date have used IC to examine the response to physical rehabilitation
activities performed by patients in the ICU. Collings et al conducted a randomised
cross-over study in which 10 ICU patients completed either a passive chair transfer or an
active sit-over-the-edge-of-the-bed (SOEOB) on one day, followed by the alternative activity
on the consecutive day. The 'active' SOEOB activity elicited a significantly greater
increase in oxygen consumption than the passive activity (90.69 ml/min (95% CI 44.04 to
137.34) vs 14.43 ml/min (95% CI −27.28 to 56.14), p = 0.007). Hickmann et al examined active
or passive cycling in critically ill patients and healthy controls, demonstrating increased
oxygen consumption during the active exercise compared to passive in patients with differing
energy requirements compared to healthy individuals.
This limited existing evidence-base demonstrates the potential for use of IC to characterise
physical rehabilitation in critically ill patients, but is restricted to particular types of
activities and fails to capture sequential assessments of patients as their rehabilitation
progresses through increasingly functional levels. Acknowledging the potential clinical
limitations of applying the IC measurement technique to all critically ill patients, the aim
of this study is to examine the feasibility of measuring energy expenditure of critically
ill patients completing a range of physical rehabilitation activities (as characterised on
the ICU Mobility Scale) performed sequentially during their ICU or ventilator weaning unit
(Lane Fox Respiratory Unit, LFU) admission using indirect calorimetry.
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