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A repeated measures, randomised cross-over trial, comparing the acute exercise response between passive and active sitting in critically ill patients

A repeated measures, randomised cross-over trial, comparing the acute exercise response between passive and active sitting in critically ill patients
A repeated measures, randomised cross-over trial, comparing the acute exercise response between passive and active sitting in critically ill patients

Early mobilisation of critically ill patients is safe and beneficial, but the metabolic cost of exercise remains unquantified. This study compared the acute exercise response in critically ill participants during passive and active sitting. Method: We conducted a prospective, randomised, cross-over study, in ventilated patients receiving rehabilitative physiotherapy. Ten participants completed a passive chair transfer, or a sit on the edge of the bed, followed by the alternate exercise activity on the consecutive day. The primary outcome measure was oxygen consumption. Results: In comparison to resting supine, a passive chair transfer elicited no change in oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production or minute ventilation; but mean arterial pressure (91.86 mmHg (95% CI 84.61 to 99.10) to 101.23 mmHg (95% CI 93.35 to 109.11) (p = 0.002)) and heart rate (89.13 bpm (95% CI 77.14 to 101.13) to 97.21 bpm (95% CI 81.22 to 113.20) (p = 0.008)) increased. Sitting on the edge of the bed resulted in significant increases in oxygen consumption (262.33 ml/min (95% CI 201.97 to 322.70) to 353.02 ml/min (95% CI 303.50 to 402.55), p = 0.002), carbon dioxide production (171.93 ml/min (95% CI 131.87 to 211.98) to 206.23 ml/min (95% CI 151.03 to 261.43), p = 0.026), minute ventilation (9.97 l/min (95% CI 7.30 to 12.65) to 12.82 l/min (95% CI 10.29 to 15.36), p < 0.001), mean arterial pressure (86.81 mmHg (95% CI 77.48 to 96.14) to 95.59 mmHg (95% CI 88.62 to 102.56), p = 0.034) and heart rate (87.60 bpm (95% CI 73.64 to 101.56) to 94.91 bpm (95% CI 79.57 to 110.25), p = 0.007). When comparing the 2 activities, sitting on the edge of the bed elicited a significantly larger increase in oxygen consumption (90.69 ml/min (95% CI 44.04 to 137.34) vs 14.43 ml/min (95% CI -27.28 to 56.14), p = 0.007) and minute ventilation (2.85 l/min (95% CI 1.70 to 3.99) vs 0.74 l/min (95% CI -0.92 to 1.56), p = 0.012). Conclusion: Sitting on the edge of the bed is a more metabolically demanding activity than a passive chair transfer in critically ill patients.

Critical illness, Early ambulation, Exercise, Oxygen consumption, Physiotherapy, Rehabilitation
1471-2253
Collings, Nikki
edbbb36c-a043-4c71-98ef-67bc2f6c4fad
Cusack, Rebecca
dfb1595f-2792-4f76-ac6d-da027cf40146
Collings, Nikki
edbbb36c-a043-4c71-98ef-67bc2f6c4fad
Cusack, Rebecca
dfb1595f-2792-4f76-ac6d-da027cf40146

Collings, Nikki and Cusack, Rebecca (2015) A repeated measures, randomised cross-over trial, comparing the acute exercise response between passive and active sitting in critically ill patients. BMC Anesthesiology, 15 (1), [1]. (doi:10.1186/1471-2253-15-1).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Early mobilisation of critically ill patients is safe and beneficial, but the metabolic cost of exercise remains unquantified. This study compared the acute exercise response in critically ill participants during passive and active sitting. Method: We conducted a prospective, randomised, cross-over study, in ventilated patients receiving rehabilitative physiotherapy. Ten participants completed a passive chair transfer, or a sit on the edge of the bed, followed by the alternate exercise activity on the consecutive day. The primary outcome measure was oxygen consumption. Results: In comparison to resting supine, a passive chair transfer elicited no change in oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production or minute ventilation; but mean arterial pressure (91.86 mmHg (95% CI 84.61 to 99.10) to 101.23 mmHg (95% CI 93.35 to 109.11) (p = 0.002)) and heart rate (89.13 bpm (95% CI 77.14 to 101.13) to 97.21 bpm (95% CI 81.22 to 113.20) (p = 0.008)) increased. Sitting on the edge of the bed resulted in significant increases in oxygen consumption (262.33 ml/min (95% CI 201.97 to 322.70) to 353.02 ml/min (95% CI 303.50 to 402.55), p = 0.002), carbon dioxide production (171.93 ml/min (95% CI 131.87 to 211.98) to 206.23 ml/min (95% CI 151.03 to 261.43), p = 0.026), minute ventilation (9.97 l/min (95% CI 7.30 to 12.65) to 12.82 l/min (95% CI 10.29 to 15.36), p < 0.001), mean arterial pressure (86.81 mmHg (95% CI 77.48 to 96.14) to 95.59 mmHg (95% CI 88.62 to 102.56), p = 0.034) and heart rate (87.60 bpm (95% CI 73.64 to 101.56) to 94.91 bpm (95% CI 79.57 to 110.25), p = 0.007). When comparing the 2 activities, sitting on the edge of the bed elicited a significantly larger increase in oxygen consumption (90.69 ml/min (95% CI 44.04 to 137.34) vs 14.43 ml/min (95% CI -27.28 to 56.14), p = 0.007) and minute ventilation (2.85 l/min (95% CI 1.70 to 3.99) vs 0.74 l/min (95% CI -0.92 to 1.56), p = 0.012). Conclusion: Sitting on the edge of the bed is a more metabolically demanding activity than a passive chair transfer in critically ill patients.

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Accepted/In Press date: 2 January 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 January 2015
Keywords: Critical illness, Early ambulation, Exercise, Oxygen consumption, Physiotherapy, Rehabilitation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 490186
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/490186
ISSN: 1471-2253
PURE UUID: d251d235-0517-42b8-8c6e-f0940cdc65c5
ORCID for Rebecca Cusack: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2863-2870

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Date deposited: 16 May 2024 16:50
Last modified: 17 May 2024 01:53

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Author: Nikki Collings
Author: Rebecca Cusack ORCID iD

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