Mobilization of critically ill patients admitted to intensive care units should be performed based on safety criteria. The aim of the present review was to establish which safety criteria are most often used to start early mobilization for patients under mechanical ventilation admitted to intensive care units. Articles were searched in the PubMed, PEDro, LILACS, Cochrane and CINAHL databases; randomized and quasi-randomized clinical trials, cohort studies, comparative studies with or without simultaneous controls, case series with 10 or more consecutive cases and descriptive studies were included. The same was performed regarding prospective, retrospective or cross-sectional studies where safety criteria to start early mobilization should be described in the Methods section. Two reviewers independently selected potentially eligible studies according to the established inclusion criteria, extracted data and assessed the studies' methodological quality. Narrative description was employed in data analysis to summarize the characteristics and results of the included studies; safety criteria were categorized as follows: cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological, orthopedic and other. A total of 37 articles were considered eligible. Cardiovascular safety criteria exhibited the largest number of variables. However, respiratory safety criteria exhibited higher concordance among studies. There was greater divergence among the authors regarding neurological criteria. There is a need to reinforce the recognition of the safety criteria used to start early mobilization for critically ill patients; the parameters and variables found might contribute to inclusion into service routines so as to start, make progress and guide clinical practice.
Obese children showed increased oscillometry parameters values representative of airway obstruction, compared to normal-weight children. Changes in some oscillometry parameters can already be observed in overweight school-aged children.
Background The Barthel Index, originally developed and validated to assess activities of daily living in patients with neuromuscular disorders, is commonly used in research and clinical practice involving critically ill patients. Objectives To evaluate the internal consistency, reliability, measurement error, and construct validity of the Barthel Index used at intensive care unit discharge. Methods In this observational study, 2 physiotherapists measured the physical functioning of 122 patients at intensive care unit discharge, using the Barthel Index and other measurement instruments. Results The patients had a median (IQR) age of 56 (47-66) years, and 62 patients (51%) were male. The primary reason for intensive care unit admission was sepsis (28 patients [23%]), and 83 patients (68%) were receiving mechanical ventilation. The Cronbach α value indicating internal consistency was 0.81. For interrater reliability, the intraclass correlation coefficient for the total score was 0.98 (95% CI, 0.97-0.98; P < .001) and the κ statistic for the individual items was 0.54 to 0.94. The standard error of measurement was 7.22, the smallest detectable change was 20.01, and the 95% limits of agreement were –10.3 and 11.8. The Barthel Index showed moderate to high correlations with the other physical functioning measurement instruments (ρ = 0.57 to 0.88; P < .001 for all). Conclusion The Barthel Index is a reliable and valid instrument for assessing physical functioning at intensive care unit discharge.
Objetivo Traduzir, adaptar transculturalmente para o português do Brasil o instrumento Early Rehabilitation Index e validar para uso na unidade de terapia intensiva o instrumento Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index , para avaliação do estado funcional. Métodos Foram executadas as seguintes etapas: preparação, tradução, reconciliação, tradução reversa, revisão, harmonização, pré-teste e avaliação psicométrica. Após esse processo inicial, a versão em português foi aplicada por dois avaliadores em pacientes que permaneciam pelo menos 48 horas internados na unidade de terapia intensiva. Verificou-se a confiabilidade da escala por meio da consistência interna, da confiabilidade entre avaliadores e do efeito piso e teto. Para a validade de constructo, correlacionou-se o Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index com instrumentos que usualmente são utilizados para avaliação do estado funcional na unidade de terapia intensiva. Resultados Participaram 122 pacientes com mediana de idade de 56 [46,8 - 66] anos. O Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index teve confiabilidade adequada com coeficiente alfa de Cronbach de 0,65. A confiabilidade entre avaliadores foi excelente, com coeficiente de correlação intraclasse de 0,94 (IC95% 0,92 - 0,96) e moderado a excelente com índice de concordância de kappa de 0,54 a 1,0. Os efeitos piso e teto foram mínimos. Observou-se a validade do Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index por meio das correlações com o escore total do Perme Escore (rô = 0,72), da Escala de Estado Funcional em UTI (rô = 0,77), do Physical Function in Intensive Care Test-score (rô = 0,69), do Medical Research Council sum score (rô = 0,58), além das dinamometrias de preensão palmar (rô = 0,58) e manual de coxa (rô = 0,55), todos com p < 0,001. Conclusão A versão adaptada do Early Rehabilitation Index para o português brasileiro e na sua totalidade, Early Rehabilitation Barthel Index é confiável e válida para avaliação do estado funcional dos pacientes na alta da unidade de terapia intensiva.
Children and adolescents exposed to PS had lower values for the spirometric variables and higher values for the oscillometric variables, indicating changes in forced and quiet parameters of lung function compared to the NPSG.
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