Clinical Practice Guideline: Early Mobilization and Rehabilitation of Critically Ill Burn Patients

Author:

Cartotto Robert1,Johnson Laura2,Rood Jody M3,Lorello David4,Matherly Annette5,Parry Ingrid6,Romanowski Kathleen7,Wiechman Shelley8,Bettencourt Amanda9,Carson Joshua S10,Lam Henry T11,Nedelec Bernadette12

Affiliation:

1. Ross Tilley Burn Centre, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, University of Toronto , Ontario , Canada

2. Burns and Trauma, MedStar Washington Hospital Center, Georgetown University , Washington, DC , USA

3. Regions Hospital Burn Center , St. Paul, Minneapolis , USA

4. Arizona Burn Center , Glendale, Arizona , USA

5. University of Utah Health Burn Center , Salt Lake City, Utah , USA

6. Shriners Hospital for Children, Northern California, University of California at Davis , Sacramento, California , USA

7. Firefighters Burn Institute Regional Burn Center, University of California at Davis , Sacramento, California , USA

8. Regional Burn Center at Harborview, University of Washington , Seattle, Washington , USA

9. University of Michigan Trauma Burn Center

10. Loyola Burn Center , Maywood, Illinois , USA

11. Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre , Toronto, Ontario , Canada

12. McGill University , Montréal, Quebec, Canada

Abstract

Abstract This Clinical Practice Guideline addresses early mobilization and rehabilitation (EMR) of critically ill adult burn patients in an intensive care unit (ICU) setting. We defined EMR as any systematic or protocolized intervention that could include muscle activation, active exercises in bed, active resistance exercises, active side-to-side turning, or mobilization to sitting at the bedside, standing, or walking, including mobilization using assistance with hoists or tilt tables, which was initiated within at least 14 days of injury, while the patient was still in an ICU setting. After developing relevant PICO (Population, Intervention, Comparator, Outcomes) questions, a comprehensive literature search was conducted with the help of a professional medical librarian. Available literature was reviewed and systematically evaluated. Recommendations were formulated through the consensus of a multidisciplinary committee, which included burn nurses, physicians, and rehabilitation therapists, based on the available scientific evidence. No recommendation could be formed on the use of EMR to reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation in the burn ICU, but we conditionally recommend the use of EMR to reduce ICU-acquired weakness in critically ill burn patients. No recommendation could be made regarding EMR’s effects on the development of hospital-acquired pressure injuries or disruption or damage to the skin grafts and skin substitutes. We conditionally recommend the use of EMR to reduce delirium in critically ill burn patients in the ICU.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Rehabilitation,Emergency Medicine,Surgery

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