Rehabilitation Following Critical Illness
- Conditions
- Critical Illness Myopathy
- Interventions
- Other: Pulmonary Rehabilitation
- Registration Number
- NCT00976807
- Lead Sponsor
- Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
- Brief Summary
The principal research question to be answered by this study is whether an exercise based rehabilitative intervention following critical illness can generate improvements in exercise capacity and quality of life beyond current (usual) care. The investigators will also aim to demonstrate that such an intervention is both practical and cost-effective.
- Detailed Description
Advances in medicine mean that an increasing number of critically ill people, including those with severe pneumonia (lung infection), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (also known as emphysema or chronic bronchitis) or the "acute respiratory distress syndrome", survive admission to the hospital intensive care unit. Survivors report health problems such as breathlessness and weakness long after discharge. In a study monitoring over 800 patients discharged from an intensive care ward, over half required some form of caregiver assistance after 1-year.
Whilst on intensive care, patients usually require help to breathe from a ventilator machine and become immobilised. This leads to weak breathing muscles in three quarters of patients, as well as weak and wasted arm and leg muscles. Survivors struggle to regain their previous level of daily activity and function, limited by shortness of breath, muscle weakness and tiredness. It is recognised that people with chronic lung problems, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, face similar problems. In this condition, exercise based therapy has been shown to improve muscle strength, walking ability, shortness of breath, and importantly quality of life.
Given these experiences, a new trial will evaluate a novel programme of exercise-based rehabilitation training in patients discharged from intensive care. The programme will last for 8-weeks and will use exercises designed to correct the breathing and limb muscle weakness, as well as education to help patients cope more effectively. The programme will begin as soon as possible following discharge from hospital and will be conducted on a mostly outpatient basis until the course is completed. By speeding the recovery of strength and activity, it is anticipated that quality of life will be improved, which this trial will attempt to measure.
The rehabilitation programme will include aerobic cardiovascular, and upper and lower limb strengthening exercises, in addition to relevant education sessions.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 20
- Age >18 years AND admitted to critical care unit
- Ventilated >48-hours (via endotracheal tube) OR received continuous non- invasive ventilation (NIV)/non-invasive continuous positive airways pressure (CPAP)
- Admitted to ICU > 48-hours and evidence of SIRS
- Glasgow Coma Score (GCS) 15 (of 15) AND Abbreviated Mini-Mental Test Score (AMMTS) >/= 8 (of 10) on enrolment into rehabilitation programme
- Mobilising on ward to a degree sufficient as to begin a majority of proposed exercises. Clinical stability for observed exercise as judged by trial team is a prerequisite.
- Participant willingness to complete a programme of exercise based therapy aimed at reducing weakness and shortness of breath: subjective weakness or dyspnoea relative to their pre-admission state is implicit
- Patients referred for terminal care or prognosis likely to be less than 12-months
- Unstable coronary artery syndrome
- Limb amputation (given special requirement for orthotics/rehabilitation)
- Critical peripheral vascular disease awaiting re-vascularisation procedure (or claudication distance <100 metres)
- Stroke with hemiparesis (likely need for specialised rehabilitation/stay on stroke unit)
- Severe, disabling locomotor problem or severe burns, which prevent effective participation in the exercises contained in the rehabilitation programme.
- Psychiatric disease necessitating anti-psychotic medication, deliberate drug overdose as the admitting ICU indication, ongoing treatment for drug or alcohol addiction, persons of no fixed abode post-discharge
- Patients undergoing renal haemodialysis (given the associated commitment to outpatient attendance)
- Extra contractual ICU referral (only if distance greater than suitable for twice weekly travel)
Additional exclusion criteria for muscle biopsy samples:
- Coagulopathy e.g. warfarin use
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Intervention Pulmonary Rehabilitation Pulmonary Rehabilitation
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Incremental Shuttle Walk Test Eight weeks
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Health Related Quality of Life Eight weeks
Trial Locations
- Locations (2)
St.Thomas' Hospital
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom
King's College Hospital
🇬🇧London, United Kingdom