This study evaluates the safety and effectiveness of an early rehabilitation program in a pediatric intensive care unit (PICU). Half of the participants will receive intensive and frequent an early mobilization program and others will receive conservative mobilization program.
The 14 early rehabilitation sessions(10=physical therapy, 4=occupational therapy) occurred per week over a 2-week period (excluding weekends) in the early rehabilitation group for 15 minutes each. The control group received 2 sessions(physical therapy) per week over a 2-week period for 10 minutes each.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
142
The early rehabilitation protocol was developed by a collaborative multidisciplinary team approach in Samsung Medical Center, and the central components include the involvement of physical therapy/occupational therapy (PT/OT).
Samsung Medical Center
Seoul, South Korea
RECRUITINGChange From Baseline Functional Status Score (FSS) at Post Test(PICU discharge)
Functional Status Scale (FSS) domains of functioning included mental status, sensory functioning, communication, motor functioning, feeding, and respiratory status, categorized from normal (score = 1) to very severe dysfunction (score = 5). FSS scores ranged from 6 to 30.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
The Pediatric Evaluation of Disability Inventory-Computer Adaptive Test(PEDI-CAT)
The PEDI-CAT incorporates a computer-adaptive platform with 276 items based on parental or caregiver reporting, and has four domains that cover daily activities, mobility, social/cognitive function, and responsibility. The PEDI-CAT yields a single score scaled from 0 to 100 for both Mobility and Self-care, with higher scores indicating greater function.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
Duration of mechanical ventilation (days)
Defined as the number of days of mechanical ventilation through an endotracheal tube during the PICU admission.
Time frame: Perioid between intubation and extubation of mechanical ventilation
PICU length of stay (days)
Defined as the number of days of PICU length of stay.
Time frame: From PICU admission to discharge
Hospital length of stay (days)
Defined as the number of days of Hospital length of stay.
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Time frame: From Baseline to hospital discharge
Number of patients discharged from the hospital to a place other than home
Number of patients discharged from the hospital to a place other than home (rehabilitation facility).
Time frame: At hospital discharge
Safety index
* Frequency of thrombus and pressure sores occurred during intervention period * Frequency of abnormal vital signs occurred during intervention period * Frequency of any adverse events associated with intervention
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
The Pediatric Risk of Mortality III (PRISM III)
The PRISM III score has 17 physiologic variables subdivided into 26 ranges. The variables most predictive of mortality were minimum systolic blood pressure, abnormal pupillary reflexes, and stupor/coma. Other risk factors, including two acute and two chronic diagnoses, and four additional risk factors, were used in the final predictors. The PRISM III score and the additional risk factors were applied to the first 24 hours of stay (PRISM III-24).
Time frame: At PICU admission
Change From post-test(PICU discharge) Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory version 4.0 (PedsQL 4.0) at follow-up test(2 months)
The Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory or PedsQLTM is a series of assessment instruments designed to measure the health-related quality of life of children. The PedsQL 4.0 provides an opportunity for the assessment of both overall (generic) quality of life as well as disease-specific quality of life. The PedsQL 4.0 Generic Core Scales are appropriate for assessing health-related quality of life in both healthy and chronically ill children. The four scales making up this generic battery include Physical Functioning (8 items), Emotional Functioning (5 items), Social Functioning (5 items), and School Functioning (5 items). A 5-point response scale is utilized across child self-report and parent proxy-report (0 = never a problem; 1 = almost never a problem; 2 = sometimes a problem; 3 = often a problem; 4 =almost always a problem).
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
Change From baseline The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) at follow-up test(2 months)
The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) is a psychological inventory based on a 4-point Likert scale and consists of 40 questions on a self-report basis. The STAI measures two types of anxiety - state anxiety, or anxiety about an event, and trait anxiety, or anxiety level as a personal characteristic. Higher scores are positively correlated with higher levels of anxiety. STAI-X consists of 20 items each for measuring state anxiety and trait anxiety. Each item is rated on a 4-point scale (1 = Not at all, 4 = Very much so), with scores ranging from 20 to 80.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
Canadian Occupational Performance Measure (COPM)
At baseline, the interviewer assisted the child and family to identify occupational performance problems in the areas of self-care, productivity or leisure. Once they had identified these problems, they were written positively as goals, which participants and their parents then prioritised by importance on a scale from 1 to 10 (10 indicating greater importance). Scores out of 10 for self-perceived performance and satisfaction were then obtained from parent. The scores were summed and averaged over the number of priorities identified to produce two overall scores out of 10 for each participant: one for performance and one for satisfaction. At post-treatment and follow-up, participants were blinded to their previous ratings in order to limit potential bias. A 2 point change in score on the COPM is considered to be clinically meaningful.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
Muscle strength measures of elbow flexor and knee extensor obtained with a hand-held dynamometer(MicroFET2).
Maximal isometric voluntary contraction will be measured with a MicroFET2 hand-held dynamometer (Hoggan Indiustries, Inc., West Jordan, UT, USA). Maximal isometric muscle strength from two different muscle groups (knee extensors and elbow flexors) will be measured. It will be performed twice for each motion, and the higher one is derived as the result. Higher values indicates higher strength.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da
Pediatric Sequential Organ Failure Assessment(pSOFA)
The Pediatric Sequential Organ Failure Assessment (pSOFA) score is a simple and objective score that allows for calculation of both the number and the severity of organ dysfunction in six organ systems (respiratory, coagulatory, liver, cardiovascular, renal, and neurologic) and the score can measure individual or aggregate organ dysfunction. Daily pSOFA score is the sum of the 6 subscores and higher scores indicate a worse outcome. Score assesses 6 organ systems: respiratory, hematological, hepatic, cardiovascular, neurological and renal. A subscore of 0 (normal)-4(most abnormal) points.
Time frame: Evaluation is conducted at two time points. At baseline (T0), assessment is carried out for within 7 days after admission to the PICU. For T1, assessment occurs within 7 days after PICU discharge or, for patients unable to be discharged, at the 30-da