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1.
PLoS One ; 15(3): e0230047, 2020.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32187212

ABSTRACT

AIM: To translate and adapt cross-culturally the De Morton Mobility Index from English to Brazilian Portuguese. Furthermore, to test the content validity, reliability, construct validity, interpretability and responsiveness for older hospitalized patients. METHODS: After we carried out the translation and the cross-cultural adaptation of the De Morton Mobility Index and its administration instructions according to international guidelines, the content validity of De Morton Mobility Index was tested by experienced physiotherapists. In the sequence, the reliability, construct validity, interpretability and responsiveness were tested in a test-retest design with 93 older patients hospitalized in ward for clinical reasons. The reliability was tested by Cronbach's alpha coefficient (internal consistency), standard error measurement (agreement), and interclass correlation coefficients (intra and inter-examiner reliability). The construct validity was tested by Pearson's correlation between the De Morton Mobility Index score and the number of steps. Interpretability was analyzed by determining the minimum detectable change and the floor and ceiling effects (frequency of maximum and minimum scoring). Responsiveness was analyzed by effect size. RESULTS: The Brazilian version of the De Morton Mobility Index was made and adapted. The internal consistency (α = 0.89), reliability intra-(ICC = 0.94) and inter-examiners (ICC = 0.82), agreement were all adequate. The De Morton Mobility Index is validity when correlated with number of steps (r = 0.46). Floor or ceiling effects (<15%) were not observed and the responsiveness was high (ES = 3.65). CONCLUSION: The De Morton Mobility Index has shown adequate reliability, validity, interpretability and responsiveness for the evaluation of the mobility of older hospitalized patients.


Subject(s)
Geriatric Assessment/methods , Hospitalization/statistics & numerical data , Mobility Limitation , Motor Activity/physiology , Range of Motion, Articular , Severity of Illness Index , Aged , Brazil , Female , Health Status Indicators , Humans , Male , Psychometrics , Reproducibility of Results
2.
J Physiother ; 65(4): 208-214, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31521553

ABSTRACT

QUESTIONS: Does advice from a physiotherapist about the importance of staying physically active during hospitalisation improve activity, mobility, strength, length of stay, and complications in older inpatients? What barriers to physical activity during hospitalisation do older inpatients perceive? DESIGN: Randomised controlled trial with concealed allocation, intention-to-treat analysis, and blinded assessment. PARTICIPANTS: Sixty-eight people who were aged > 60 years and admitted to a university hospital ward. INTERVENTION: In addition to usual hospital care, the experimental group received a booklet with content about the deleterious effects of hospitalisation and the importance of staying active during hospitalisation. The control group received usual hospital care only. OUTCOME MEASURES: The amount of physical activity was measured via accelerometry during the hospital admission. Mobility was assessed using the de Morton Mobility Index (DEMMI), and muscle strength was assessed using a handgrip dynamometer. Length of stay and complications were extracted from hospital records. The barriers to staying active during hospitalisation were investigated via a questionnaire. RESULTS: Accelerometry showed a mean between-group difference of 974 steps/day (95% CI 28 to 1919) in favour of the experimental group. The intervention also increased moderate-intensity physical activity and reduced sedentary time, although these effects might be trivially small. Experimental group participants were about one-fifth as likely to lose mobility during their hospital admission (two of 33) than control group participants (10 of 35), relative risk 0.21 (95% CI 0.05 to 0.90). Effects of the intervention were unclear regarding muscle strength, length of stay and incidence of complications between the groups. Patients reported that the main barriers to remaining active during hospitalisation were dyspnoea, lack of space, and fear of contracting infection. CONCLUSION: In older inpatients, the addition of advice from a physiotherapist about maintaining activity during hospitalisation increases the level of physical activity and prevents loss of mobility. REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.govNCT03297567.


Subject(s)
Exercise , Hospitalization , Inpatients/education , Patient Education as Topic , Physical Therapists , Sedentary Behavior , Accelerometry , Aged , Female , Humans , Immobility Response, Tonic , Intention to Treat Analysis , Length of Stay , Male , Middle Aged , Muscle Strength , Single-Blind Method
3.
Braspen J ; 33(1): 86-100, 20180000. quad
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-908867

ABSTRACT

A desnutrição é frequentemente encontrada no ambiente hospitalar. Muitas vezes negligenciada, apesar de afetar desfavoravelmente a saúde da população, a desnutrição apresenta como principais complicações: pior resposta imunológica, atraso no processo de cicatrização, risco elevado de complicações cirúrgicas e infecciosas, maior probabilidade de desenvolvimento de lesões por pressão, aumento no tempo de internação e do risco de mortalidade. Fora isso, acarreta considerável aumento dos custos hospitalares. A taxa de desnutrição varia entre 20 e 50% em adultos hospitalizados e durante a hospitalização esta condição piora progressivamente principalmente em idosos e pacientes críticos. Em 1998, o inquérito brasileiro, conhecido como IBRANUTRI, avaliou 4 mil pacientes internados na rede pública hospitalar de vários estados brasileiros, confirmando a prevalência da desnutrição em 48,1% dos pacientes. Há 20 anos, estes dados foram publicados e o cenário permanece imutável até os dias atuais, pois, em 2016, outro estudo (com aproximadamente 30.000 pacientes) corroborou a manutenção da alta prevalência de desnutrição em pacientes hospitalizados. A identificação precoce da desnutrição, bem como o manejo, por meio de ferramentas recomendadas, possibilita estabelecer a conduta nutricional mais apropriada e melhora do desfecho nestes pacientes.O objetivo desta campanha é reduzir as taxas de desnutrição por meio de uma série de ações que incluem a triagem, o diagnóstico, o manejo e o tratamento da desnutrição. Para facilitar a maneira de difundir este conhecimento, foi desenvolvido um método mnemônico com a palavra "DESNUTRIÇÃO", abordando cada letra inicial de forma simples, desde o conceito até o tratamento da desnutrição. Desta forma, o método garante uma integração interdisciplinar, além de averiguar os principais aspectos do cuidado geral do paciente desnutrido.


Subject(s)
Humans , Male , Female , Brazil , Hospitalization , Malnutrition , Risk Factors
4.
Clin. biomed. res ; 38(2): 167-177, 2018.
Article in Portuguese | LILACS | ID: biblio-1025629

ABSTRACT

Introdução: A unidade de terapia intensiva, pacientes que apresentam um grave comprometimento pulmonar, com alterações nos valores fisiológicos de complacência pulmonar, acabam desenvolvendo uma limitação relacionada a volumes pulmonares. Um dos problemas resultantes é a hipercapnia. Para ajudar a reduzir essas alterações, pode-se usar técnicas como a insuflação de gás traqueal (TGI), que atua minimizando o estresse pulmonar, melhorando as trocas gasosas e reduzindo o volume minuto ventilatório e a pressão. Assim, o objetivo deste estudo foi analisar e descrever o uso de TGI e a sua eficácia na redução da hipercapnia e nos parâmetros da ventilação mecânica invasiva de pacientes críticos. Métodos: Foi realizada uma revisão sistemática da literatura com busca nas bases de dados do SciELO, LILACS, PubMed e MEDLINE, com publicações de 2005 a 2016. Foram identificados um total de 1.437 artigos. Os critérios de elegibilidade foram a utilização do método de TGI isolado ou combinado a outros recursos e a inclusão de desfechos da sua efetividade em amostras experimentais ou humanas que mostravam lesão pulmonar e/ou outras alterações pulmonares, entre elas a hipercapnia. Resultados: Após a leitura e análise criteriosa dos artigos, 10 estudos foram incluídos nesta revisão. Eles abordavam a eficácia dos métodos de TGI na redução dos níveis de CO2 e as condições para a diminuição dos parâmetros da ventilação mecânica e melhora da mecânica ventilatória. Conclusão: Os estudos incluídos na presente revisão sugerem que a TGI pode ser uma técnica eficaz quando realizada em complicações pulmonares nos pacientes hipercápnicos com lesão pulmonar. Entretanto, são estudos distintos e controversos, o que compromete a análise dos resultados obtidos para total eficácia do recurso terapêutico. (AU)


Introduction: At intensive care units, patients presenting with severe pulmonary involvement, with changes in the physiological values of pulmonary compliance, develop a limitation related to pulmonary volumes, resulting in some cases in hypercapnia. In order to help decreasing these alterations, some techniques may be used such as tracheal gas insufflation (TGI), which acts minimizing pulmonary stress, improving gas exchanges and decreasing respiratory minute volume and pressure. Thus, this study aimed to analyze and to describe TGI use and efficacy in reducing hypercapnia and parameters of invasive mechanical ventilation of critically ill patients. Methods: For this systematic review, we searched SciELO, LILACS, PubMed and MEDLINE databases for articles published from 2005 to 2016. A total of 1,437 articles were found. The eligibility criteria were the use of TGI alone or together with other resources and the evaluation of its effectiveness in experimental or human samples that showed lung injury and/or other pulmonary abnormalities, including hypercapnia. Results: After careful reading and analysis of the articles, 10 studies were included in this review. They addressed the effectiveness of TGI methods in reducing levels of CO2 levels and conditions to decrease parameters of mechanical ventilation and to improve ventilation mechanics. Conclusion: The studies included in the present review suggest that TGI may be an efficient technique when applied to pulmonary complications of patients suffering from hypercapnia with pulmonary lesions. However, the studies are different and controversial, which compromises the analysis of the results obtained for total efficacy of the therapeutic resource. (AU)


Subject(s)
Humans , Respiration, Artificial/methods , Insufflation/methods , Hypercapnia/therapy , Capnography/statistics & numerical data
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