Muscle Weakness May Persist for Months After ICU Stay
Hospitalized patients who'd been on mechanical ventilators were studied up to 2 years after discharge.
A stay in an intensive care unit can lead to muscle weakness that continues to cause significant physical limitations for up to two years later, according to a new study.
Researchers looked at 222 patients who were in 13 ICUs at four Baltimore hospitals between October 2004 and October 2007. All suffered from an acute lung condition. They spent an average of two weeks in the ICU, and all of them spent time on a mechanical ventilator.
The patients' muscle strength was assessed when they left the hospital and again three, six, 12 and 24 months later. More than one-third of them had muscle weakness when they left the hospital, the study found.
While many did show improvement over time, muscle weakness was associated with significant physical limitations and lower quality of life during the follow-up period, the researchers said.
Patients' age and the length of bed rest in the ICU were the most important factors affecting muscle weakness. For every day of bed rest in the ICU, patients had 3 percent to 11 percent less muscle strength in the months after they left the hospital, according to the study.
Even a single day of bed rest in the ICU has a lasting impact on weakness, which impacts patients' physical functioning and quality of life.
We previously thought that bed rest and sedation in an ICU were helpful for patients, but we're finding this approach to care is actually harmful to the long-term recovery of many.
These findings show that ICU patients need to be kept as active as possible, according to the researchers.
Nothing is free of risk in the ICU, but the harms of bed rest far exceed the potential harms of giving these patients rehabilitation delivered by a skilled clinical team -- even when patients are very sick and on life support.
We must stop making excuses about why a patient can't do rehabilitation today -- he has a CT scan or she's getting dialysis. We need to highly prioritize rehabilitation, which we now see as just as -- if not more -- important than many other tests and treatments we offer our patients in intensive care.
Source: HealthDay News
- 391 reads
Human Rights
Fostering a More Humane World: The 28th Eurasian Economic Summi
Conscience, Hope, and Action: Keys to Global Peace and Sustainability
Ringing FOWPAL’s Peace Bell for the World:Nobel Peace Prize Laureates’ Visions and Actions
Protecting the World’s Cultural Diversity for a Sustainable Future
Puppet Show I International Friendship Day 2020