Mans Christina M, Reeve Julie C, Elkins Mark R
Physiotherapy Department, Waikato Hospital, Hamilton, New Zealand.
Division of Rehabilitation and Occupation Studies, AUT University, Auckland, New Zealand
Clin Rehabil. 2015 May;29(5):426-38. doi: 10.1177/0269215514545350. Epub 2014 Aug 26.
To evaluate whether preoperative inspiratory muscle training is effective in preventing postoperative pulmonary complications and reducing length of hospital stay in people undergoing cardiothoracic or upper abdominal surgery.
Medline, CINAHL, AMED, PsychINFO, Scopus, PEDro, and the Cochrane Library.
A systematic review and meta analysis of randomized controlled trials (or quasi-randomized controlled trials) investigating a form of preoperative inspiratory muscle training, compared with sham or no inspiratory muscle training. Participants were adults (16 years and over) awaiting elective open cardiac, thoracic, or upper abdominal surgery. Methodological quality was assessed using the PEDro scale.
Eight studies involving 295 participants were eligible for inclusion. The trained group had significantly higher maximal inspiratory pressure at the end of the preoperative training period (mean difference: 15 cm H2O, 95% confidence interval (CI): 9 to 21). This benefit was maintained through the early postoperative period, when lung function also recovered significantly more quickly in the trained group. Inspiratory muscle training also substantially reduced postoperative pulmonary complications (relative risk 0.48, 95% CI 0.26 to 0.89). Although not statistically significant, length of hospital stay also tended to favour the trained group. There were no statistically significant differences between the groups for the remaining outcomes. Participant satisfaction with inspiratory muscle training was high.
Preoperative inspiratory muscle training significantly improves respiratory (muscle) function in the early postoperative period, halving the risk of pulmonary complications. The training does not increase length of stay, but more data are required to confirm whether it reduces length of stay.
评估术前吸气肌训练对于预防心胸外科手术或上腹部手术患者术后肺部并发症及缩短住院时间是否有效。
医学期刊数据库(Medline)、护理学与健康领域数据库(CINAHL)、联合和补充医学数据库(AMED)、心理学文摘数据库(PsychINFO)、文摘和引文数据库(Scopus)、循证医学数据库(PEDro)以及考科蓝图书馆。
对随机对照试验(或半随机对照试验)进行系统综述和荟萃分析,这些试验研究了一种术前吸气肌训练形式,并与假训练或无吸气肌训练进行比较。参与者为等待择期开放性心脏、胸部或上腹部手术的成年人(16岁及以上)。使用PEDro量表评估方法学质量。
八项研究共295名参与者符合纳入标准。训练组在术前训练期结束时的最大吸气压力显著更高(平均差值:15 cm H₂O,95%置信区间(CI):9至21)。这一益处持续到术后早期,训练组的肺功能在此时恢复得也明显更快。吸气肌训练还显著降低了术后肺部并发症(相对风险0.48,95% CI 0.26至0.�9)。虽然住院时间在统计学上无显著差异,但也倾向于训练组。两组在其余结果方面无统计学显著差异。参与者对吸气肌训练的满意度较高。
术前吸气肌训练在术后早期显著改善呼吸(肌肉)功能,将肺部并发症风险减半。该训练不会增加住院时间,但需要更多数据来证实其是否能缩短住院时间。