Effects of a multimodal rehabilitation program in COVID-19 patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit: A quasi-experimental study

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35434/rcmhnaaa.2021.143.1244

Keywords:

Covid-19, Physical medicine and rehabilitation, mechanical ventilation, intensive care unit

Abstract

Background: Patients with severe COVID-19 evolve to acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) and require management in Intensive Care Units (ICU) where they are exposed to immobilization, immunosuppression, malnutrition, nosocomial infections; may develop ICU Acquired Weakness (ICUAW), which increases with the stay and use of mechanical ventilation (MV).There is evidence of the use of different modalities in rehabilitation to mitigate these effects. Goal: To determine the efficacy of a Multimodal Rehabilitation Program (MRP) in reducing the number of days of mechanical ventilation and stay in patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in ICU, as well as to describe its clinical and hospital characteristics. Material and Methods: An quasi-experimental study was designed, with sequential sampling and without blinding. A control and intervention group was formed, with 32 participants each. A Multimodal Rehabilitation Program (MRP) based on four therapeutic modalities was applied and the intervention was quantified through the use of proposed indicators. Results: The variation in days of ICU stay and days of MV were similar in both groups. The Multimodal Rehabilitation Index (iMR) ranged from 0.1 to 2.7 (mean = 1.2, SD = 0.7) and had significance for cut-off points ≤ 0.81 and ≤ 0.94 in mortality (p = 0.02) and Ventilator-free days at 28 days (VFDs-28) (p = 0.01). Conclusions: No statistically significant difference was found in favor of the intervention in terms of days of stay in the ICU and days of MV. Explanatorily, it was reported that iMR was related to (VFDs-28) and mortality in patients with severe COVID-19.

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Author Biographies

Ronald Milton Rodríguez-Montoya, Especialista en Medicina Intensivista

  1. Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos. Hospital Alta Complejidad Virgen de la Puerta. EsSalud. Trujillo. Perú.

Julio Santos Hilario-Vargas, Doctor en Ciencias Biomedicas

  1. Departamento de Fisiología. Facultad de Medicina - Universidad Nacional de Trujillo. Trujillo. Perú.

Manuel Enrique Alcántara-Gutti, Especialista en Medicina Física y Rehabilitación

  1. Hospital Víctor Lazarte Echegaray. EsSalud. Trujillo. Perú.

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Published

2021-12-13

How to Cite

1.
Rodríguez-Montoya RM, Hilario-Vargas JS, Alcántara-Gutti ME. Effects of a multimodal rehabilitation program in COVID-19 patients admitted to the Intensive Care Unit: A quasi-experimental study. Rev. Cuerpo Med. HNAAA [Internet]. 2021 Dec. 13 [cited 2024 May 14];14(3):272-9. Available from: https://cmhnaaa.org.pe/ojs/index.php/rcmhnaaa/article/view/1244

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Original Article