1Department Rehabilitation Sciences, Faculty of Kinesiology and Rehabilitation Sciences, KU Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. 2Department of Intensive Care, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium. 3Medical Intensive Care Unit of the Department of General Internal Medicine, University Hospitals Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Crit Care Med. 2014 Mar;42(3):701-11. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0000000000000030.
To determine the reliability of volitional and nonvolitional limb muscle strength assessment in critically ill patients and to provide guidelines for the implementation of limb muscle strength assessment this population.
The following computerized bibliographic databases were searched with MeSH terms and keywords or combinations: MEDLINE through PubMed and Embase through Embase.com.
Articles were screened by two independent reviewers. Included studies were all performed in humans and were original articles. The research population exists of adult, critically ill patients or ICU survivors of either sex, and those admitted to a medical, surgical, respiratory, or mixed ICU. A study was included if reliability of muscle strength measurements was determined in this population.
Data on baseline characteristics (country, study population, eligibility, age, setting and method, and equipment of limb muscle strength assessment) and reliability scores were obtained by two independent reviewers.
Data of six observational studies were analyzed. Interrater reliability of the Medical Research Council scale for individual muscle groups varied from "fair" or "substantial" (weighted κ, 0.23-0.64) to "very good" agreement (weighted κ, 0.80-0.96). Interrater reliability of the Medical Research Council-sum score was found to be very good in all four studies (intraclass correlation coefficients, 0.86-0.99 or Pearson product moment correlation coefficient = 0.96). Interrater reliability of handheld dynamometry was comparable between two studies (intraclass correlation coefficients, 0.62-0.96). Interrater reliability of handgrip dynamometry was very good in two studies (intraclass correlation coefficients, 0.89-0.97). Intrarater reliability of handheld dynamometry and handgrip dynamometry was assessed in one study, and results were very good (intraclass correlation coefficients > 0.81). No studies were obtained on reliability of nonvolitional muscle strength assessment.
Voluntary muscle strength measurement has proven reliable in critically ill patients provided that strict guidelines on adequacy and standardized test procedures and positions are followed.
确定评估危重症患者自主和非自主肢体肌肉力量的可靠性,并为该人群实施肢体肌肉力量评估提供指南。
使用 MeSH 术语和关键词或组合,对以下计算机化文献数据库进行了检索:通过 PubMed 检索 MEDLINE 和通过 Embase.com 检索 Embase。
两位独立审查员筛选了文章。纳入的研究均为在人类中进行的原始文章。研究人群为男性和女性的成年危重症患者或 ICU 幸存者,以及入住内科、外科、呼吸科或混合 ICU 的患者。如果在该人群中确定了肌肉力量测量的可靠性,则纳入研究。
两位独立审查员获取了关于基本特征(国家、研究人群、入选标准、年龄、地点和方法以及肢体肌肉力量评估设备)和可靠性评分的数据。
对 6 项观察性研究的数据进行了分析。个别肌肉群的医学研究委员会量表的组内可靠性从“一般”或“中等”(加权 κ,0.23-0.64)到“非常好”的一致性(加权 κ,0.80-0.96)不等。在四项研究中均发现医学研究委员会总和评分的组内可靠性非常好(组内相关系数,0.86-0.99 或皮尔逊积矩相关系数=0.96)。两项研究中手持式握力计的组内可靠性相当(组内相关系数,0.62-0.96)。两项研究中手握力计的组内可靠性非常好(组内相关系数,0.89-0.97)。一项研究评估了手持式握力计和手握力计的组内可靠性,结果非常好(组内相关系数>0.81)。未获得关于非自主肌肉力量评估可靠性的研究。
在严格遵循充分性指南以及标准化测试程序和体位的情况下,评估危重症患者的自主肌肉力量测量具有可靠性。