加速度计测量的住院病人身体活动和腹部大手术后的相关结果:系统回顾。

IF 1.9 Q3 MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL
Mikita Fuchita, Kyle J Ridgeway, Clinton Kimzey, Edward L Melanson, Ana Fernandez-Bustamante
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引用次数: 1

摘要

背景:目前尚不清楚腹部大手术后住院患者的体育活动如何影响预后。加速度计的研究可能为术后活动提供进一步的证据。目的:我们旨在总结目前评估加速度计测量的术后体力活动对腹部大手术后预后影响的文献。方法:我们于2021年10月检索PubMed和Google Scholar进行系统评价。如果研究在腹部大手术后立即使用加速度计测量住院患者的身体行为,则纳入研究。腹部大手术的定义是在全身麻醉下进行的任何非产科手术,需要住院。只有评估了体育活动对术后结果(如术后并发症、胃肠功能恢复、住院时间、出院目的地和再入院)的影响,研究才符合条件。我们排除了涉及老年人的研究结果:我们确定了15项研究。15项研究中有14项(93%)存在高偏倚风险。结论:尽管观察性研究显示腹部大手术术后体力活动与预后之间存在很强的关联,但随机对照试验尚未证明与常规护理相比,增强活动干预的益处。总的偏倚风险很高,我们无法综合出术后活动的具体建议。未来的研究将受益于改进研究设计,增加方法的严谨性,以及测量步数以外的身体行为,以了解术后活动对腹部大手术后结果的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Accelerometer-Measured Inpatient Physical Activity and Associated Outcomes After Major Abdominal Surgery: Systematic Review.

Accelerometer-Measured Inpatient Physical Activity and Associated Outcomes After Major Abdominal Surgery: Systematic Review.

Accelerometer-Measured Inpatient Physical Activity and Associated Outcomes After Major Abdominal Surgery: Systematic Review.

Accelerometer-Measured Inpatient Physical Activity and Associated Outcomes After Major Abdominal Surgery: Systematic Review.

Background: It remains unclear how inpatient physical activity after major abdominal surgery affects outcomes. Accelerometer research may provide further evidence for postoperative mobilization.

Objective: We aimed to summarize the current literature evaluating the impact of accelerometer-measured postoperative physical activity on outcomes after major abdominal surgery.

Methods: We searched PubMed and Google Scholar in October 2021 to conduct a systematic review. Studies were included if they used accelerometers to measure inpatient physical behaviors immediately after major abdominal surgery, defined as any nonobstetric procedures performed under general anesthesia requiring hospital admission. Studies were eligible only if they evaluated the effects of physical activity on postoperative outcomes such as postoperative complications, return of gastrointestinal function, hospital length of stay, discharge destination, and readmissions. We excluded studies involving participants aged <18 years. Risk of bias was assessed using the risk-of-bias assessment tool for nonrandomized studies (RoBANS) for observational studies and the revised Cochrane risk-of-bias tool for randomized trials (RoB 2) for randomized controlled trials (RCTs). Findings were summarized by qualitative synthesis.

Results: We identified 15 studies. Risk of bias was high in 14 (93%) of the 15 studies. Most of the studies (11/15, 73%) had sample sizes of <100. Of the 15 studies, 13 (87%) included the general surgery population, 1 (7%) was a study of patients who had undergone gynecologic surgery, and 1 (7%) included a mixed (abdominal, thoracic, gynecologic, and orthopedic) surgical population. Of the 15 studies, 12 (80%) used consumer-grade accelerometers to measure physical behaviors. Step count was the most commonly reported physical activity outcome (12/15, 80%). In the observational studies (9/15, 60%), increased physical activity during the immediate postoperative period was associated with earlier return of gastrointestinal function, fewer surgical and pulmonary complications, shorter hospital length of stay, and fewer readmissions. In the RCTs (6/15, 40%), only 1 (17%) of the 6 studies demonstrated improved outcomes (shorter time to flatus and hospital length of stay) when a mobility-enhancing intervention was compared with usual care. Notably, mobility-enhancing interventions used in 4 (67%) of the 6 RCTs did not result in increased postoperative physical activity.

Conclusions: Although observational studies show strong associations between postoperative physical activity and outcomes after major abdominal surgery, RCTs have not proved the benefit of mobility-enhancing interventions compared with usual care. The overall risk of bias was high, and we could not synthesize specific recommendations for postoperative mobilization. Future research would benefit from improving study design, increasing methodologic rigor, and measuring physical behaviors beyond step counts to understand the impact of postoperative mobilization on outcomes after major abdominal surgery.

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来源期刊
Interactive Journal of Medical Research
Interactive Journal of Medical Research MEDICINE, RESEARCH & EXPERIMENTAL-
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