Background
Intensive care-acquired weakness (ICUAW) is a common problem following an ICU admission
1–3 and is associated with prolonged hospitalisation, delayed weaning and increased mortality.
4–6 Up to 25% of patients requiring mechanical ventilation (MV) for greater than 7 days develop ICUAW,
1 and this figure may rise to 50–100% in the septic population.
7
8 Long-term follow-up studies of survivors of critical illness have demonstrated significantly impaired health-related quality of life
9
10 and physical functioning
11–14 up to 5 years after ICU discharge, with weakness being the most commonly reported physical limitation.
12 While survival has been a main focus of intensive care research, there is a paradigm shift to investigating methods to improve other patient-centred outcomes.
15 There has been an increased awareness worldwide of the potential impact and benefit of early rehabilitation in the ICU.
15–19 Early rehabilitation in the form of mobilisation has been shown to be safe and feasible;
20–24 however, it relies on the patient being co-operative, and to have sufficient cardiorespiratory reserve and medical stability
25 to participate in therapy.
Muscle mass is known to reduce by at least 1.6% per day,
26 with a 16–20% reduction in muscle mass within the first week in critically ill individuals with severe sepsis,
27 indicating that interventions to attenuate muscle wasting in this initial stage may be beneficial. The musculoskeletal system is a highly plastic and adaptive system, responding quickly to changes in the demands placed upon it.
3
28
29 The pathogenicity and molecular mechanisms for ICUAW have primarily been extrapolated from animal and in vitro muscle wasting models
3
30–33 with ubiquitin−proteasome-mediated breakdown postulated to be primarily responsible for the muscle loss observed in critically ill individuals.
30
34–36 Local and systemic inflammatory processes, which occur in critically ill individuals, are thought to lead to a disruption in the balance between muscle protein synthesis and protein breakdown, leading to an overall reduction in muscle mass and force generation capacity.
30
37 Increased circulating inflammatory cytokines (eg, TNF-α and IL-1β) may drive mitochondrial oxidative stress and increase intracellular calcium, which are postulated to trigger muscle proteolytic pathways
30
38 and may interfere with insulin signalling leading to anabolic resistance,
39 and contribute to electrophysiological inexcitability of the muscle.
40 Recent clinical trials in critically ill individuals have demonstrated a reduction in muscle myofibre size with preferential proteolysis of the thick myosin filaments,
41
42 with one trial demonstrating a dramatic increase in protein degradation of up to 160%.
42 Currently, the pathogenesis of ICUAW is poorly understood given limited research within human clinical trials.
2
30 Establishing the cellular and molecular mechanisms responsible for loss of muscle mass and strength is essential to help develop future medical and physical therapies.
There is growing interest in the use of assistive technologies to enable patients to commence therapy early in an ICU admission.
43 Supine cycle ergometry, which can be utilised passively, actively (by patient effort) or active assisted (using electrical stimulation)
16 has been studied in ICU within one trial with promising results.
16 However, the intervention did not begin until at least 1-week post admission and there were no data reporting frequency of active versus passive cycling.
16 Neuromuscular electrical stimulation (NMES) creates passive (ie, non-volitional) contraction of skeletal muscles through the use of low-voltage electrical impulses delivered through to the skin to underlying muscle via surface electrodes.
43 It can be commenced early, without the need for patient participation and has been shown to prevent skeletal muscle atrophy in healthy individuals
44 and improve physical function and strength in chronic disease populations, such as heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
45 To date, studies within the ICU have involved stimulation of only isolated muscle groups such as the quadriceps, or peroneal muscles, in a resting non-functional position using NMES, with conflicting findings.
27
46–50 Further rigorous research needs to be conducted to determine the optimal stimulation settings, and efficacy of these interventions particularly post ICU on muscle strength and physical function, which is being investigated in one trial currently underway in the USA.
51Functional electrical stimulation (FES) is different to NMES, as it recruits muscles in functional patterns stimulating them in a similar way to how the muscles would ‘normally’ contract under volitional control in healthy individuals. For FES, the majority of the literature to date has been developed within the chronic stroke
52 and spinal cord injury (SCI) populations.
53 Alternating recruitment of several muscle groups in a functional activity, such as cycling has been demonstrated in a chronic SCI population to improve the length of time a contraction can be sustained, prior to reaching the point of fatigue.
54 This may enable patients to train for a longer period of time, thereby enhancing the training effect. FES-assisted cycling may influence muscle strength and physical function not only at ICU discharge, but also at acute hospital discharge. This trial seeks to examine the combined effect of FES-assisted cycling on muscle mass, strength, and physical function, and compare this with cycling alone, and standard care.