IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Galeazzi, Milan, Italy.
Physical and Rehabilitative Medicine, Department of Health Sciences, University of Eastern Piedmont, Novara, Italy.
Eur J Phys Rehabil Med. 2020 Oct;56(5):652-657. doi: 10.23736/S1973-9087.20.06539-9. Epub 2020 Sep 1.
This paper is the first update of the second edition of the rapid living systematic review on the latest scientific literature informing rehabilitation of patients with COVID-19 and/or describing consequences of the disease and its treatment, as they relate to limitations in functioning of rehabilitation interest. The aim of this study was to report data of a systematic search performed on papers published in July 2020.
The methodology described in the second edition of the rapid living systematic review was applied to search eligible papers included in the databases between July 1, 2020 and July 31, 2020.
Eight-hundred-ninety-two papers were identified through database searching (after removal of duplicates); of these, only 23 studies were included. According to OCEBM 2011 Levels of Evidence Table, they were level 3 in 30.5% cases and level 4 in 69.5%. No RCT was found. Nineteen papers studied COVID-19 patients, assessed in the acute (10 studies), post-acute (8 studies) and chronic phase (one study). Four studies reported data on the impact of COVID-19 on subjects with pre-existing health conditions.
The current literature production still focuses more on describing all the possible aspects and complications of the pathology than on interventions or new organization models to deal with it. Albeit evidence on handling COVID-19 from a rehabilitative point of view is improving each month, further studies are still mandatory to report the role of rehabilitation in this scenario.
本文是对第二版快速系统综述的首次更新,该综述快速检索了最新的科学文献,这些文献涉及与康复相关的功能障碍,提供了有关康复的 COVID-19 患者的最新信息,或描述了疾病及其治疗的后果。本研究旨在报告 2020 年 7 月发表的论文进行系统检索的数据。
应用第二版快速系统综述中描述的方法,在 2020 年 7 月 1 日至 7 月 31 日期间对数据库中的合格论文进行了检索。
通过数据库检索(去除重复项后)共确定了 892 篇论文;其中,只有 23 项研究被纳入。根据 OCEBM 2011 年证据水平表,其中 30.5%为 3 级,69.5%为 4 级。未发现 RCT。19 篇论文研究了 COVID-19 患者,评估了急性期(10 项研究)、恢复期(8 项研究)和慢性期(1 项研究)。4 项研究报告了 COVID-19 对患有既往健康状况的患者的影响的数据。
目前的文献生产仍然更侧重于描述病理的所有可能方面和并发症,而不是干预措施或处理它的新组织模式。尽管每月都有关于从康复角度处理 COVID-19 的证据在增加,但仍需要进一步的研究来报告康复在这种情况下的作用。