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Muscle weakness
a common side event of long stays in
Intensive Care Units
Newswise — After decades of focusing on the
management of respiratory failure,
circulatory shock and severe infections that
lead to extended stays in hospital intensive
care units, critical care researchers are
increasingly turning attention to what they
believe is a treatable complication
developed by many who spend days or weeks
confined to an ICU bed: debilitating muscle
weakness that can linger long after hospital
discharge.
In a
supplement to the current issue of the
journal Critical
Care Medicine,
an interdisciplinary research group – from
Johns Hopkins and across the world — propose
a new classification scheme for helping
physicians to uniformly and precisely
identify a variety of muscle-wasting
disorders acquired in the ICU, a framework
that came out of a meeting of leaders in the
field in Brussels, Belgium in March 2009.
Getting doctors on the same page with common
definitions and awareness is a big first
step in preventing and treating ICU-related
debility, the researchers say.
“Patients who develop muscle weakness while
they’re critically ill do much worse,” says
Robert D. Stevens, M.D., associate professor
of anesthesiology and critical care
medicine, neurology, neurosurgery and
radiology at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine.
“They have higher mortality, their stay in
the ICU is prolonged, their stay in the
hospital is prolonged. They incur serious
costs. Some of these patients in the long
run remain weak and are unable to resume
physical activities as before.”
Some form of muscle weakness affects nearly
half of patients with serious illness
treated in intensive care units, or ICUs,
the researchers say.
But
prevention or treatment of ICU-acquired
weakness has been slowed, doctors say, by a
lack of agreement on the definitions of what
constitutes these disorders and an
inadequate framework for properly
classifying them.
New treatments which might be effective in
reducing weakness in the ICU include
enduring better control of blood sugar
levels and promoting early mobility.
Standard practice in ICUs, where patients
are often hooked up to ventilators, dialysis
machines and infusion pumps, has been to
keep patients in bed until they recover from
their critical illness.
Stevens calls it the “classic paradox” in
the treatment of many illnesses: Stay in bed
and rest until you’re better. It is now
recognized, however, that muscle weakness is
significantly worsened by being immobilized
in ICU, Stevens says, and “that whole idea
of bed rest as being something beneficial is
being turned on its head.”
Other
hospital units, including those that treat
patients coming out of surgery, have adopted
the practice of getting patients up and
moving again as soon as possible. Only
recently has critical care begun to move
slowly in that direction.
Recognizing
the muscle wasting and weakness associated
with extended ICU stays, Stevens says new
research is promoting reduced levels of
sedation and early mobilization and exercise
among those patients.
Some recent efforts – including work being
done at Johns Hopkins – have been to get
patients cycling in bed, standing, sitting
in a chair and even walking while they are
still on respirators.
Along with intensive care unit-acquired
weakness (ICUAW), Stevens and his colleagues
also define critical illness polyneuropathy
(CIP), critical illness neuromyopathy (CINM)
and critical illness myopathy (CIM). All of
these are disorders that the patient may
pick up in the ICU, not something he or she
had upon admission.
Other Hopkins researchers involved in the
paper include David R. Cornblath, M.D.,
Ahmet Hoke, M.D., Ph.D., Scott A. Marshall,
M.D., and Dale M. Needham, M.D., Ph.D.
Researchers from elsewhere include Bernard
de Johghe, M.D., Centre Hospitalier de
Poissy-Saint-Germain in France; Naeem A.
Ali, M.D., Ohio State University, and Tarek
Sharshar, M.D., Ph.D., University of
Versailles Saint-Quentin en Yvelines Garches
in France
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