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Pilot Study on Device-assisted Mobilisation of Critically Ill Patients (LIANA-I)

Charité University Medicine Berlin logo

Charité University Medicine Berlin

Status

Completed

Conditions

Critical Illness
Muscle Weakness

Treatments

Device: Device-assisted mobilisation with the sit/stand stabilizer Liana

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05716451
LIANA-I

Details and patient eligibility

About

This Pilot study will hypothesize that patients with organ insufficiency and breathing assistance in our post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) and ICU will be mobilized more often to an ICU mobility scale (IMS) ≥ 4 (i.e. standing) using the Liana® mobilizer. Therefore a randomized controlled pilot study will be conducted. The aim is to achieve an important physical function mile stone more often using this device.

Secondary hypotheses are:

  1. The intervention will relieve the burden of the health care staff in the unit
  2. The intervention will positively influence the functional outcome of critically ill patients
  3. The intervention is perceived as positive by the patients

Full description

Patients who have been treated in the ICU for a prolonged period of time often have a high degree of immobility. In this context, a state of generalized weakness associated with muscle atrophy (ICUAW) develops in approximately 40% of ICU patients. The severity of generalized weakness may be individual in each patient. It is certain that especially elderly patients and patients with prolonged immobilization have an increased incidence of ICUAW. Symptoms can be highly variable depending on the severity of the course. Some patients report weakness of the extremities to paresis and weakness of the respiratory muscles. Weakness of the respiratory musculature can lead to a prolonged weaning process of mechanical ventilation, prolonging the stay in the ICU. Functional impairments due to ICUAW may also persist many years after the ICU stay. If ICUAW is diagnosed promptly, outcome can be improved by targeted early mobilization. Early mobilization is defined as mobilization in the first 72 h from ICU admission. However, there are numerous barriers to the implementation of early mobilization in critically ill patients, so this remains a major challenge.

Various studies have shown that patients can benefit from a high level of mobilization. For example, Scheffenbichler et al. showed that a high dose of mobilization was associated with increased independence of patients after discharge. The level of mobilization showed positive effects not only in this study, but also in Paton and colleagues. They were able to show that achieving a higher level of mobility (according to the Intensive Care Mobility Scale) was associated with improved outcome at six months. They found that achieving a higher level of mobilization positively affected the health status of patients, whereas increasing the number of mobilizations did not.

With device-assisted mobilization, patients could be mobilized to standing position early and more frequently. The aim of this pilot study is to test whether mobilization of critically ill patients with ventilatory support using device-assisted mobilization leads to increased mobilization to standing (IMS 4) or beyond.

Enrollment

40 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Intensive care patient with ventilatory support and an expected intensive care stay of at least another 48 h
  • Age ≥ 18 years
  • Current length of intensive care stay < 48 h

Exclusion criteria

  • Moribund and critically ill
  • Suspected 6-month mortality > 75%.
  • Increased intracranial pressure
  • Critically ill after cardiopulmonary resuscitation
  • Critically ill with primary neuromuscular disease or motor neuron disease
  • One or more amputated extremities
  • Patients, within 2h after surgery
  • Unstable fractures
  • Severe traumatic brain injury (e.g., brain and skull injuries)
  • Circulatory instability with norepinephrine > 0.3 µg/kg/min
  • Patients for whom there is an indication for deep sedation (RASS -5)
  • Language barrier
  • Fitting of legs into leg trays is not possible due to e.g. patient weight

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

40 participants in 2 patient groups

Intervention Group
Experimental group
Description:
Mobilization incl. support by the Liana. In the intervention group, Liana is used to train trunk stability in a sitting position. If this is successful, the patient is trained to stand. Mobilization to higher levels is performed according to clinical standards.
Treatment:
Device: Device-assisted mobilisation with the sit/stand stabilizer Liana
Control Group
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard of Care without the use of the Liana. In the control group the therapy is carried out according to the ward standard without using the Liana.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Stefan J Schaller, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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