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FeaturesMarch 31, 2015

WASHINGTON -- The intensive-care unit is a last frontier for physical therapy: It's hard to exercise patients hooked to ventilators. Some hospitals do manage to help critically ill patients stand or walk, even if they're tethered to life support. Now research that put sick mice on tiny treadmills shows why even a little activity may help speed recovery...

By LAURAN NEERGAARD ~ Associated Press
Physical therapist Katie Kellner helps patient Terry Culler do some exercises and briefly stand March 11 despite being hooked to a ventilator in the intensive care unit at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. (Warren Cameron Dennis III ~ Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center)
Physical therapist Katie Kellner helps patient Terry Culler do some exercises and briefly stand March 11 despite being hooked to a ventilator in the intensive care unit at Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center. (Warren Cameron Dennis III ~ Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center)

WASHINGTON -- The intensive-care unit is a last frontier for physical therapy: It's hard to exercise patients hooked to ventilators.

Some hospitals do manage to help critically ill patients stand or walk, even if they're tethered to life support. Now research that put sick mice on tiny treadmills shows why even a little activity may help speed recovery.

"I think we can do a better job of implementing early mobility therapies," said Dr. D. Clark Files of Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, who led the research and whose hospital is trying to get more critically ill patients up, ventilator and all.

Hospitals long have nudged less critical patients out of bed to prevent their muscles from wasting away.

But over the past several years, studies in ICUs have shown some of the sickest of the sick also could benefit -- getting out of intensive care sooner, with fewer complications -- once it's medically feasible for them to try.

This isn't just passively changing a patient's position. It could involve helping them sit on the side of the bed, do arm exercises with an elastic band or in-bed cycling or even walk a bit with nurses holding all the tubes and wires.

It takes extra staff, and especially for patients breathing through tubes down their throats, it isn't clear how often it's attempted outside specialized centers.

At Wake Forest Baptist, a physical therapist helped Terry Culler, 54, do arm and leg exercises without dislodging his ventilator tubing, working up to the day he stood for the first time since developing respiratory failure about three weeks earlier.

"I cheered. I was clapping," his wife, Ruanne Culler of Lexington, North Carolina, said after two therapists and a nurse finally helped him to his feet.

Biologically, why could such mild activity help? Files focused on one especially deadly reason people wind up on a ventilator: acute respiratory distress syndrome, or ARDS, the problem Terry Culler battled. It strikes about 200,000 Americans a year, usually after someone suffers serious injuries or another illness such as pneumonia; it can trigger respiratory failure. Survivors suffer profound muscle weakness.

Files' team injured the lungs of laboratory mice in a way that triggered ARDS. The animals, sick but still breathing on their own, walked or ran on a treadmill for a few minutes at a time over two days.

That short amount of exercise did more than counter wasting of the animals' limbs.

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It also slowed weakening of the diaphragm, used to breathe.

And it tamped down a dangerous inflammatory process in the lungs that Files suspects fuels muscle damage on top of the wasting of enforced bed rest.

"It's not only putting a load on the legs," Files explained. "It's something systemic."

When certain white blood cells stick inside ARDS-affected lungs too long, they slow healing. The lungs of the exercised mice contained fewer of those cells, and their blood contained less of the protein that activates them, Files reported in the journal Science Translational Medicine this month.

Examining blood frozen from ARDS patients who had participated in an earlier Wake Forest Baptist study comparing early mobility to standard ICU care, he found patients who had gotten a little exercise harbored less of that protein.

The new research adds to the biologic rationale, but there's already enough evidence supporting early mobility that families should ask whether their loved one is a candidate, said ICU specialist Dr. Catherine Hough of the University of Washington, who wasn't involved with Files' study.

She's surveying a sample of U.S. hospitals and finding variability in how often ICUs try, from those that help a majority of critically ill patients stand to others where no ventilated patients do.

Obviously, key is whether the patient can tolerate movement.

But so is whether hospitals keep ventilated patients sedated despite research showing many don't need to be, Hough said.

Back at Wake Forest Baptist, Terry Culler began the exercises when he was medically stable, and he scribbled notes saying he wanted to participate.

"It's given him something to look forward to," his wife said a few weeks before he was released from the hospital.

"Ask about it every day," University of Washington's Hough advises families, because critical illness changes frequently.

"On Monday, the patient might have a good reason not to be moving forward with mobilization, but there's a very good chance it's different on Tuesday," she said.

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