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Acquired weakness (AW) is a common complication among patients in the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). It is a systemic muscle weakness and dysfunction associated with critical illness, often related to prolonged bed rest, mechanical ventilation, systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS), and multiple organ dysfunction syndrome (MODS). The primary clinical manifestations include weakness in limb and respiratory muscles, particularly diminished strength in distal muscle groups. As a result, the weaning process from mechanical ventilation becomes more challenging, leading to prolonged ICU stays, increased mortality, and a higher risk of long-term functional disability. The significance of AW lies not only in its substantial impediment to short-term recovery but also in its role as a core component of Post-Intensive Care Syndrome (PICS), profoundly affecting patients' long-term outcomes.
Mechanical ventilation is a vital life-support technology for critically ill children in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU). However, complications associated with mechanical ventilation have garnered increasing attention, particularly Acquired Weakness in mechanically ventilated children. With improving survival rates in the PICU, a growing number of pediatric critical illness survivors are at risk of developing AW. Despite rapid advancements in pediatric critical care medicine in China, there is currently a lack of an early warning system for AW in children receiving mechanical ventilation, resulting in significantly delayed clinical interventions. This project aims to identify novel biomarkers for pediatric ICU-AW and develop an early warning model. It holds promise for transitioning from the traditional post-symptomatic diagnostic approach to subclinical prediction of AW in children, which is of great clinical value for reducing disability rates and optimizing critical care rehabilitation strategies.
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An electronic database was established to collect clinical data from mechanically ventilated children, including baseline clinical characteristics, laboratory test results, and imaging data. Each participating research center designated dedicated investigators to enroll study subjects starting on the same date (eligible patients already hospitalized on the start date were included). These investigators were responsible for data cleaning, organization, and standardization to ensure data quality. For all enrolled patients, data on demographic characteristics, clinical features, and laboratory test results were recorded using case report forms (CRFs) on the day of enrollment (D0), day 3 (D3), day 10 (D10), the day of discharge from the pediatric intensive care unit (Ddis), or the day of death (DD).
To investigate the pathophysiology of ICU-acquired weakness (ICU-AW) under the inflammation-metabolism-neuromuscular injury hypothesis, dynamic plasma biological sample collection was performed. Samples were collected at different time points during mechanical ventilation to establish a biobank. Proteomic and genomic multi-omics approaches were employed to screen for inflammatory cytokines, specific degradation biomarkers of muscle injury, and metabolism-related genes such as those involved in mitochondrial function. Levels of these biomarkers in biological samples from mechanically ventilated children were measured to analyze their association with the onset and progression of ICU-AW, thereby untangling the pathophysiology of ICU-AW at the molecular level.
The Pathophysiology of ICU-AW remains unclear, and there is a lack of research exploring its molecular mechanisms, making it difficult to identify effective early warning indicators. Currently, it is believed that the pathophysiology of ICU-AW is associated with persistent inflammation, immunosuppression, and catabolic syndrome (PICS), resulting from the interplay of multiple factors and pathways. Key mechanisms include: inflammatory response and immune dysregulation, mitochondrial dysfunction and abnormal energy metabolism, oxidative stress, and microvascular changes, which collectively lead to muscular and neurological dysfunction. The core of its pathophysiology lies in the imbalance between protein synthesis and muscle protein degradation, which occurs in response to various stimuli. Key mechanisms include: 1) The ubiquitin-proteasome system (UPS). Pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g: NF-κB) upregulate muscle-specific E3 ubiquitin ligases (such as MuRF1 and Atrogin-1), accelerating muscle protein degradation and contributing to muscle atrophy. 2) The autophagy-lysosome system. Abnormal activation of this system leads to muscle fiber atrophy, though its specific regulatory mechanisms remain unclear. Although some progress has been made in mechanistic studies of ICU-AW, its pathophysiological mechanisms are complex and not yet fully elucidated. There is a lack of biomarkers for early clinical identification and insufficient translational molecular research.
In recent years, the discovery of multi-dimensional molecular markers has provided new directions for early identification and mechanistic analysis of ICU-AW:
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500 participants in 2 patient groups
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Liu Yuxin; Chen Weiming
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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