The ICM research agenda on intensive care unit-acquired weakness.
Nicola LatronicoMargaret HerridgeRamona O HopkinsDerek AngusNicholas HartGreet HermansTheodore IwashynaYaseen ArabiGiuseppe CiterioE. Wesley ElyJesse HallSangeeta MehtaKathleen PuntilloJohannes Van den HoevenHannah WunschDeborah CookClaudia Dos SantosGordon RubenfeldJean-Louis VincentGreet Van den BergheElie AzoulayDale M NeedhamPublished in: Intensive care medicine (2017)
We present areas of uncertainty concerning intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW) and identify areas for future research. Age, pre-ICU functional and cognitive state, concurrent illness, frailty, and health trajectories impact outcomes and should be assessed to stratify patients. In the ICU, early assessment of limb and diaphragm muscle strength and function using nonvolitional tests may be useful, but comparison with established methods of global and specific muscle strength and physical function and determination of their reliability and normal values would be important to advance these techniques. Serial measurements of limb and respiratory muscle strength, and systematic screening for dysphagia, would be helpful to clarify if and how weakness of these muscle groups is independently associated with outcome. ICUAW, delirium, and sedatives and analgesics may interact with each other, amplifying the effects of each individual factor. Reduced mobility in patients with hypoactive delirium needs investigations into dysfunction of central and peripheral nervous system motor pathways. Interventional nutritional studies should include muscle mass, strength, and physical function as outcomes, and prioritize elucidation of mechanisms. At follow-up, ICU survivors may suffer from prolonged muscle weakness and wasting and other physical impairments, as well as fatigue without demonstrable weakness on examination. Further studies should evaluate the prevalence and severity of fatigue in ICU survivors and define its association with psychiatric disorders, pain, cognitive impairment, and axonal loss. Finally, methodological issues, including accounting for baseline status, handling of missing data, and inclusion of patient-centered outcome measures should be addressed in future studies.
Keyphrases
- intensive care unit
- mechanical ventilation
- cognitive impairment
- end stage renal disease
- case control
- skeletal muscle
- mental health
- young adults
- cardiac surgery
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- ejection fraction
- current status
- healthcare
- chronic kidney disease
- risk factors
- physical activity
- public health
- spinal cord injury
- chronic pain
- sleep quality
- prognostic factors
- depressive symptoms
- oxidative stress
- hip fracture
- adipose tissue
- pain management
- peritoneal dialysis
- electronic health record
- type diabetes
- machine learning
- risk assessment
- big data
- climate change
- patient reported outcomes
- mass spectrometry
- acute kidney injury
- social media
- locally advanced
- simultaneous determination
- radiation therapy
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- weight loss
- global health
- solid phase extraction
- spinal cord