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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Early Mobilization of Patients in Intensive Care: Organization, Communication and Safety Factors that Influence Translation into Clinical Practice.

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TLDR
This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2018 and can be found online at https://www.biomedcentral.com/collections/annualupdate2018.
Abstract
Please change the first sentence to: This article is one of ten reviews selected from the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine 2018. Other selected articles can be found online at https://www.biomedcentral.com/collections/annualupdate2018 . Further information about the Annual Update in Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine is available from http://www.springer.com/series/8901 .

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Citations
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Post-intensive care syndrome: its pathophysiology, prevention, and future directions

TL;DR: The pathophysiology, prevention, and future directions of Post‐intensive care syndrome are outlined, which includes performance of the ABCDEFGH bundle, which incorporates the prevention of delirium, early rehabilitation, family intervention, and follow‐up from the time of ICU admission to the time to discharge.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rehabilitation After Critical Illness in People With COVID-19 Infection.

TL;DR: Probably impairment patterns, considerations for healthcare practitioner resilience, and organization of services to meet demand are discussed, and innovative approaches to care, such as virtual rehabilitation, are likely to become common in this environment.
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Older Adults in the Cardiac Intensive Care Unit: Factoring Geriatric Syndromes in the Management, Prognosis, and Process of Care: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association

TL;DR: Age-related risks are examined and some of the distinctive dynamics pertinent to older adults and emerging opportunities to enhance CICU care are described, as well as the need for additional clinical research to best advance CICu care for the already dominating and still expanding population of older adults.
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Identifying patients' support needs following critical illness: a scoping review of the qualitative literature.

TL;DR: This review is the first to identify the change in social support needs among intensive care survivors as they transition from intensive care to the home environment.
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Early Active Mobilization during Mechanical Ventilation in the ICU

TL;DR: Early active mobilization may mitigate ICU-acquired weakness, increase survival, and reduce disability in patients undergoing invasive mechanical ventilation in the ICU as mentioned in this paper , but the intervention was associated with increased adverse events, such as arrhythmias, altered blood pressure, and desaturation.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Early physical and occupational therapy in mechanically ventilated, critically ill patients: a randomised controlled trial.

TL;DR: A strategy for whole-body rehabilitation-consisting of interruption of sedation and physical and occupational therapy in the earliest days of critical illness-was safe and well tolerated, and resulted in better functional outcomes at hospital discharge, a shorter duration of delirium, and more ventilator-free days compared with standard care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long-term Cognitive Impairment and Functional Disability Among Survivors of Severe Sepsis

TL;DR: Severe sepsis in this older population was independently associated with substantial and persistent new cognitive impairment and functional disability among survivors, likely resulting in a pivotal downturn in patients' ability to live independently.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decompressive Craniectomy in Diffuse Traumatic Brain Injury

TL;DR: In adults with severe diffuse traumatic brain injury and refractory intracranial hypertension, early bifrontotemporoparietal decompressive craniectomy decreased intrac Cranial pressure and the length of stay in the ICU but was associated with more unfavorable outcomes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early intensive care unit mobility therapy in the treatment of acute respiratory failure

TL;DR: A Mobility Team using a mobility protocol initiated earlier physical therapy that was feasible, safe, did not increase costs, and was associated with decreased intensive care unit and hospital length of stay in survivors who received physical therapy duringintensive care unit treatment compared with patients who received usual care.
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