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ICU survivors often suffer from long-term functional disability. An attenuated response to physical exercise in skeletal muscle after critical illness may contribute to persisting weakness.
The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of resistance exercise on muscle protein synthesis in former ICU patients. The investigators hypothesize that study subjects recovering from critical illness have an impaired anabolic response to resistance exercise after ICU stay as compared to non-critically ill controls.
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Background
The debilitating impact of critical illness has been recognized for several decades. Disability related to intensive care is now described as a syndrome called ICU-acquired weakness (ICUAW). ICUAW affects up to 70% of ICU patients and is most common with higher illness severity. Patients that develop ICUAW require longer hospitalization and have a higher risk of death. Weakness may persists for several years in ICU survivors. It has significant long-term consequences, and is associated with increased health care costs, delayed return to work, and overall poor quality of life.
Muscle atrophy is a major contributor to ICUAW. Critical illness is associated with a rapid loss of skeletal muscle, induced by catabolic signals from proinflammatory cytokines and hormones. The ability to regain lost muscle mass during convalescence may also be impaired. In a small observational study, muscle atrophy resolved only in a minority of ICU survivors at six months after ICU discharge.
Studies in exercise physiology have demonstrated that resistance training and amino acid ingestion have synergistic effects on muscle protein synthesis in healthy subjects. It is therefore an appealing therapy to reconstitute muscle mass after critical illness. Despite several clinical trials, there is equipoise regarding the efficacy of exercise in improving physical function in-ICU after ICU discharge. These mixed signals are unsurprising given the heterogeneous causes of ICUAW.
Only a few studies in this field have examined muscle architecture or cellular signaling in response to training. However, the gold standard in determining the anabolic response to exercise is to directly measure the effects on protein synthesis and breakdown. There is still no published research using this methodology to assess the effects of exercise interventions in former ICU patients. To understand the role of physical exercise in regaining lost muscle mass, the investigators plan to investigate the anabolic effects to resistance training after critical illness.
Aim and hypothesis
The aim of this study is to determine the anabolic response to resistance exercise after critical illness. The investigators hypothesize that study subjects recovering from critical illness have an impaired anabolic response to resistance exercise after ICU stay as compared to non-critically ill controls.
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Inclusion criteria
Adult (≥18 years) previously admitted to an ICU at Karolinska University Hospital for ≥3 days and discharged alive from hospital
OR
Adult (≥18 years) without a history of ICU admission (control group)
Exclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria marked with asterisk only apply to former ICU patients.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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40 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Arabella Fischer, MD PhD; Martin Sundström Rehal, MD PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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