危重病幸存者神经康复期间健康状况的综合评估和进展:一项前瞻性队列研究。

IF 5.7 1区 医学 Q1 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE
Marion Egger, Melanie Finsterhölzl, Daria Farabegoli, Franziska Wippenbeck, Maria Schlutt, Friedemann Müller, Volker Huge, Klaus Jahn, Jeannine Bergmann
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:危重病幸存者经常会出现长期障碍,通常被称为重症监护后综合征(PICS)。重症监护后综合征包括身体、认知和精神障碍。此外,重症监护室(ICU)获得性肌无力(ICUAW)一词也是针对危重病后肌无力而创造的。有关 PICS 和 ICUAW 患者病情发展和预后的研究很少。因此,我们旨在使用综合结果测量法评估重症患者神经康复期间的健康状况及其进展,描述 PICS 的患病率,并评估与康复结果相关的因素:本前瞻性队列研究的研究对象为在重症监护室接受机械通气≥5天且接受神经康复治疗的混合原因危重症患者。在从重症监护室出院后(V1)和从住院神经康复中心出院前不久(V2),对一系列结果(患者报告、临床医生报告和表现)进行了评估。在 V1 和 V2 阶段计算了 PICS 的患病率(PICS 的定义是在任何 PICS 维度上至少有一项损伤)。进行多重逻辑回归以确定与康复结果(不良结果 = 改良 Rankin 量表 > 2)和 V2 时 ICUAW(MRC 总分结果)相关的因素:共纳入 250 名危重病幸存者(62 ± 14 岁,34% 为女性,重症监护室住院时间中位数为 55 天,住院康复时间中位数为 65 天)。11 名参与者(4.4%)在 V2 期前死亡。除感觉障碍和疼痛外,所有康复结果均有明显改善。在 V1 期和 V2 期,分别有 96% 和 85% 的患者出现了 PICS,其中主要是身体领域(V1:87%,V2:66%;ICUAW 的 MRC 总分为 7 分),但仍有相当多的患者受到影响。因此,出院时与健康相关的生活质量相当低(0.64 ± 0.28,EQ-5D-5L 指数值)。V1 时的 MRC 总分、机械通气持续时间和女性性别与较差的康复结果显著相关。V1时的握力(参考值的百分比)、年龄、女性性别和合并症与出院时ICUAW持续存在密切相关:结论:尽管危重病幸存者在康复期间病情有了明显改善,但他们在康复出院时仍面临着PICS和ICUAW的巨大负担。危重病幸存者需要长期随访、支持性机构和量身定制的长期多学科疗法,即使在强化康复后也是如此:试验注册:德国临床试验注册中心,DRKS00021753。https://drks.de/search/en/trial/DRKS00021753 。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Comprehensive assessment and progression of health status during neurorehabilitation in survivors of critical illness: a prospective cohort study.

Background: Critical illness survivors frequently suffer from long-term impairments, often described as post-intensive care syndrome (PICS). PICS encompasses physical, cognitive, and mental impairments. Additionally, the term intensive care unit (ICU)-acquired weakness (ICUAW) was coined for muscle weakness after critical illness. Research on the progression and outcome of individuals affected by PICS and ICUAW is scant. Thus we aimed to assess the health status and its progression during neurorehabilitation in critically ill patients using comprehensive outcome measures, describe the prevalence of PICS, and evaluate factors associated with rehabilitation outcomes.

Methods: Patients with mixed reasons for critical illness who received ≥ 5 days of mechanical ventilation on the ICU and who were admitted to neurorehabilitation, were eligible to be included in this prospective cohort study. A number of outcomes (patient-reported, clinician-reported, and performance) were assessed after discharge from the ICU (V1) and shortly before discharge from inpatient neurorehabilitation (V2). The prevalence of PICS, defined as having at least one impairment in any PICS dimension), was calculated at V1 and V2. Multiple logistic regressions were conducted to identify factors associated with rehabilitation outcome (poor outcome = modified Rankin Scale > 2) and ICUAW at V2 (MRC sum score < 48).

Results: In total, 250 critical illness survivors (62 ± 14 years, 34% female, median stay on ICU 55 days, median inpatient rehabilitation 65 days) were included. 11 participants (4.4%) died before V2. All outcomes improved significantly during rehabilitation except sensory impairment and pain. PICS was present in 96% at V1 and in 85% at V2, whereby mainly the physical domain (V1: 87%, V2: 66%; ICUAW with MRC sum score < 48) and the cognitive domain (V1:65%, V2:55%; Montreal Cognitive Assessment < 26) were affected. Mental impairment was lower (V1:48%, V2:29%; Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale > 7), but still affected a considerable number of participants. Accordingly, health-related quality of life was rather low at discharge (0.64 ± 0.28, index value of EQ-5D-5L). MRC sum score at V1, duration of mechanical ventilation, and female gender were significantly associated with a poor rehabilitation outcome. Grip strength in % of reference at V1, age, female gender, and comorbidities were significantly associated with persistent ICUAW at discharge.

Conclusions: Despite significant improvements during rehabilitation, survivors after critical illness experience a substantial burden of PICS and ICUAW at discharge from rehabilitation care. Survivors of critical illness require long-term follow-up, supportive structures, and tailored long-term multi-disciplinary therapies even after intensive rehabilitation.

Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00021753. Registered 03 September, 2020. https://drks.de/search/en/trial/DRKS00021753 .

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来源期刊
Annals of Intensive Care
Annals of Intensive Care CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE-
CiteScore
14.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
107
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Annals of Intensive Care is an online peer-reviewed journal that publishes high-quality review articles and original research papers in the field of intensive care medicine. It targets critical care providers including attending physicians, fellows, residents, nurses, and physiotherapists, who aim to enhance their knowledge and provide optimal care for their patients. The journal's articles are included in various prestigious databases such as CAS, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, Journal Citation Reports/Science Edition, OCLC, PubMed, PubMed Central, Science Citation Index Expanded, SCOPUS, and Summon by Serial Solutions.
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