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一项观察性研究,旨在调查使用患者自有技术来量化重症幸存者的身体活动量。

An observational study investigating the use of patient-owned technology to quantify physical activity in survivors of critical illness.

机构信息

Intensive Care Unit, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Port Road, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia, SA 5000; Discipline of Acute Care Medicine, Adelaide Health and Medical Sciences Building, 4 North Terrace, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia, SA 5000.

Intensive Care Unit, Royal Adelaide Hospital, Port Road, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia, SA 5000.

出版信息

Aust Crit Care. 2020 Mar;33(2):137-143. doi: 10.1016/j.aucc.2019.01.009. Epub 2019 Mar 14.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Physical activity after intensive care unit (ICU) discharge is challenging to measure but could inform research and practice. A patient's smartphone may provide a novel method to quantify physical activity.

OBJECTIVES

We aimed to evaluate the feasibility and accuracy of using smartphone step counts among survivors of critical illness.

METHODS

We performed a prospective observational cohort study in 50 patients who had an ICU length of stay>48 h, owned a smartphone, were ambulatory before admission, and were likely to attend follow-up at 3 and 6 months after discharge. At follow-up, daily step counts were extracted from participants' smartphones and two FitBit pedometers, and exercise capacity (6-min walk test) and quality of life (European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions) were measured.

RESULTS

Thirty-nine (78%) patients returned at 3 months and 33 (66%) at 6 months, the median [interquartile range] smartphone step counts being 3372 [1688-5899] and 2716 [1717-5994], respectively. There was a strong linear relationship, with smartphone approximating 0.71 (0.58, 0.84) of FitBit step counts, P < 0.0001, R-squared = 0.87. There were weak relationships between step counts and the 6-min walk test distance.

CONCLUSION

Although smartphone ownership and data acquisition limit the viability of using extracted smartphone steps at this time, mean daily step counts recorded using a smartphone may act as a surrogate for a dedicated pedometer; however, the relationship between step counts and other measures of physical recovery remains unclear.

摘要

背景

对 ICU 出院后的身体活动进行测量具有挑战性,但这可以为研究和实践提供信息。患者的智能手机可能提供了一种量化身体活动的新方法。

目的

我们旨在评估使用智能手机来衡量危重病幸存者身体活动的可行性和准确性。

方法

我们进行了一项前瞻性观察队列研究,纳入了 50 名 ICU 住院时间>48 h、拥有智能手机、入院前能走动且可能在出院后 3 个月和 6 个月时接受随访的患者。在随访时,从参与者的智能手机和两个 FitBit 计步器中提取每日计步数,并测量运动能力(6 分钟步行试验)和生活质量(欧洲生活质量 5 维度)。

结果

39 名(78%)患者在 3 个月时和 33 名(66%)患者在 6 个月时返回,智能手机的中位(四分位距)计步数分别为 3372(1688-5899)和 2716(1717-5994)。智能手机计步数与 FitBit 计步数之间呈强线性关系,智能手机接近 FitBit 计步数的 0.71(0.58,0.84),P<0.0001,R-squared=0.87。计步数与 6 分钟步行试验距离之间的关系较弱。

结论

尽管智能手机的拥有率和数据采集限制了此时使用提取的智能手机步数的可行性,但使用智能手机记录的平均每日步数可能可以替代专用计步器;然而,计步数与其他身体恢复措施之间的关系尚不清楚。

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