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Effectiveness of an Exercise Re-training Program on Dyspnea in Patients After Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome Secondary to Severe COVID-19 Pneumonia in Post-ICU (RECOVER)

F

Fondation Hôpital Saint-Joseph

Status

Completed

Conditions

Dyspnea

Treatments

Other: Specific exercise rehabilitation treatment
Other: No specific exercise rehabilitation treatment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04569266
RECOVER

Details and patient eligibility

About

Dyspnea is defined by a subjective sensation of respiratory discomfort, the intensity of which varies according to the terrain, the anamnesis and the cause. Resuscitation is associated with many causes of dyspnea, including initial distress, mechanical ventilation, or after-effects following the pathology and its management.

Respiratory distress is the most severe form of impaired lung function. It is the first cause of hospitalization in intensive care. This distress, indicative of the failure of the respiratory system, is always severe and potentially fatal. It therefore constitutes an absolute therapeutic emergency. Dyspnea is often the revealing symptom of the condition and the urgency surrounding its management is an additional factor of concern for the patient. As a result, dyspnea is a pejorative element associated with severity or even death.

Full description

During these episodes of respiratory insufficiency, the management is based on ventilatory replacement by generally invasive mechanical ventilation. This allows correction of hematosis disorders but can lead to complications either directly (respiratory infections) or indirectly (neuromuscular complications and/or complications related to prolonged bed rest requiring prolonged re-education). Although mechanical ventilation makes it possible to improve the objective parameters and contributes considerably to improving the prognosis of these patients, it is nevertheless, despite the progress made, often associated with patient breathlessness due to respiratory pathology and difficulties in optimizing the interaction between the individual and the machine.

Resuscitation will also be associated with amyotrophy due to bed rest, inflammation, reduced metabolic possibilities, especially anabolic ones, and the use of certain treatments (corticosteroids, curares). This muscle loss rapidly affects the diaphragm, then secondarily the peripheral muscles in the context of resuscitation neuromyopathy. On the other hand, complications affecting the entire musculoskeletal system will quickly cause the resuscitation patient to suffer from cardiorespiratory desadaptation, reducing the capacity for exertion on discharge and ultimately resulting in dyspnea on exertion.

In patients surviving the initial condition, dyspnea persists and may be reoccurring months or even years later, despite initial rehabilitation. It is strongly associated with anxiety and even fear of death and contributes to the development of post-traumatic stress disorder. This persistent feeling of respiratory discomfort, which limits the patient's autonomy in his or her daily activities, seems to be able to reduce quality of life. Moreover, the perpetuation of this dyspnea could promote a spiral of deconditioning leading to a progressive deterioration of the cardio-respiratory system, justifying new hospitalizations.

In patients with chronic respiratory insufficiency, exercise rehabilitation supervised by physiotherapists allows, in addition to improving autonomy, a significant reduction in dyspnea, thus increasing the quality of life of these patients.

The study's objective is to evaluate the effect of post-resuscitation respiratory rehabilitation for SARS-Cov-2 in improving dyspnea. Secondly, investigators will seek to evaluate the correlation between quality of life and post-resuscitation dyspnea.

Enrollment

63 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patient whose age ≥ 18 years old
  • Patient who has been hospitalized in an intensive care unit and discharged for at least 3 months.
  • Patient who has had a laboratory confirmed respiratory infection with SARS-Cov-2 biologically confirmed by PCR or any other commercial or public health test or diagnosed by CT scan.
  • Patient who has been undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation or high-flow nasal oxygen therapy during the resuscitation stay for more than 48 consecutive hours
  • Francophone Patient
  • Patient affiliated to social security or, failing that, to another health insurance system
  • Patient capable of giving free, informed and express consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Lack of possibility of carrying out rehabilitation sessions :

    • Presence of contraindications to rehabilitation :

      • Severe neurological disease (Parkinson's disease, dementia, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, aphasia, constituted ischemic stroke with significant sequelae)
      • Osteoarticular pathology reducing mobility
    • Geographic distance (>5km from the rehabilitation center's reference practice)

  • Patient with a mMRC≤1

  • Patient deprived of liberty

  • Patient under guardianship or curatorship

  • Patient under the protection of justice

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

63 participants in 2 patient groups

No specific exercise rehabilitation treatment
Other group
Description:
After randomization, patients will not benefit from any specific exercise rehabilitation treatment until 6 months post-ICU. They will then be proposed to follow the "treatment" protocol if efficacy is demonstrated, once their follow-up in the study is completed.
Treatment:
Other: No specific exercise rehabilitation treatment
specific exercise rehabilitation treatment
Experimental group
Description:
Patients will receive a prescription for exercise rehabilitation, at the rate of 2 sessions of approximately 1 hour each per week for 10 weeks. Continuous endurance training will start at 60-70% of the patient's maximum power. For patients who are unable to maintain continuous re-training, "interval training" sequences (30 seconds of effort followed by 30 seconds of rest) may be offered. Initially, the effort will be 15 minutes, then gradually increase to reach an exercise duration of 40 minutes or 45-60 minutes for endurance or interval training respectively. The power can be adjusted as the patient progresses to reach the target heart rate and dyspnea at 4-6 on the BORG scale. All patients will be offered lower limb and upper limb strengthening exercises. Each exercise will consist of 3-4 sets of 6-12 repetitions.
Treatment:
Other: Specific exercise rehabilitation treatment

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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