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Friday, April 09, 2010 (16:38:39)
Tags : Sedatives, Intensive Care Unit, Research

Mild work out helps cut dosage of prescribed sedatives

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Washington: The use of prescribed sedatives goes down by half if mild work out programmes are introduced among critically ill patients in the intensive care unit (ICU), research says.

Mild work out, experts say, should be performed 30-45 minutes by patients under the guidance of specially-trained physical and occupational therapists.

It can include any combination of either leg or arm movements while laying flat in bed, sitting up or standing, or even walking slowly in the corridors of the ICU.

In its latest work out report, the team closely monitored the progress of 57 patients admitted to a medical intensive care unit (or MICU) in 2007. Their treatment encompassed 794 days spent in the unit.

Members of the team checked the patients' records daily for several months before and after the physical rehabilitation project began.

Each patient was mechanically ventilated for at least four days, with half receiving no more than one work out session before the enhanced work out plan started, while half received at least seven physical therapy sessions after the plan's implementation.

"Our work challenges physicians to rethink how they treat critically ill patients and shows the downstream benefits of early mobilisation work outs," says critical care specialist Dale Needham, who spearheaded the project.

"Our patients keep telling us that they do not want to be confined to their beds, they want to be awake, alert and moving," says an expert.

"Patients are not afraid of working out when they are in the ICU, and they are embracing this new approach to their care in the ICU. It actually motivates them to get well and reminds them that they have a life outside the four walls surrounding their hospital beds," he adds.

The experts found that the use of drowsiness-causing benzodiazepines declined to only 26 percent of patient days spent in the MICU in the four months, following introduction of early mobilisation practices, compared to 50 percent of patient days in the three months leading up to the project.

Daily episodes of delirium, when a patient may hallucinate, be unable to think straight, or simply be unaware of their surroundings, were sharply curtailed. (IANS)
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