Early intervention (mobilization or active exercise) for critically ill adults in the intensive care unit

Mar 28, 2018The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Starting movement or exercise early for severely ill adults in intensive care

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Abstract

A total of 690 participants in four randomized controlled trials were analyzed for the effects of early mobilization on physical function in critically ill adults.

  • One study reported low-quality evidence indicating that early mobilization may improve the likelihood of returning to independent functional status at hospital discharge (59% versus 35%).
  • The absolute effect suggests that providing early mobilization could lead to 246 more individuals per 1000 achieving independent functional status.
  • Uncertainty surrounds the effects of early mobilization on physical function as measured by various scales, with low-quality evidence reported across studies.
  • Adverse events related to early mobilization were low, with only one study documenting incidents such as oxygen desaturation and catheter dislodgement.
  • Current evidence is considered low quality due to small sample sizes, high dropout rates, and variability in intervention descriptions.

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Full Text

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