Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Tier 4 — Narrative / commentaryPeer-reviewed

The ICM research agenda on intensive care unit-acquired weakness

Nicola Latronico, Margaret S. Herridge, Ramona O. Hopkins, Derek C. Angus, Nicholas Hart, Greet Hermans, Theodore J. Iwashyna, Yaseen M. Arabi, Giuseppe Citerio, E. Wesley Ely, Jesse B. Hall, Sangeeta Mehta, Kathleen Puntillo, Johannes Van den Hoeven, Hannah Wunsch, Deborah Cook, Claúdia C. dos Santos, Gordon D. Rubenfeld, Jean‐Louis Vincent, Greet Van den Berghe, Élie Azoulay, Dale M. Needham

Intensive Care Medicine · 2017

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Summary

This collaborative paper, authored by leading intensive care researchers, presents a coordinated research agenda addressing intensive care unit-acquired weakness—a significant complication affecting critically ill patients. The work identifies key knowledge gaps and proposes priorities for future investigation into ICUAW aetiology, clinical assessment, prevention strategies, and long-term patient outcomes. The agenda aims to harmonise international research efforts and guide evidence generation in this under-resourced clinical area.

UK applicability

The findings and proposed research priorities are directly applicable to UK critical care services, where ICUAW affects outcomes in National Health Service intensive care units. The research agenda may inform commissioning of UK-based studies and clinical practice guidelines for rehabilitation of critically ill survivors.

Key measures

Research priorities and evidence gaps in ICUAW diagnosis, mechanisms, prevention, and rehabilitation outcomes

Outcomes reported

The paper outlines a coordinated research agenda on intensive care unit-acquired weakness (ICUAW), identifying evidence gaps and priorities for future investigation. As suggested by the authorship and journal scope, it likely synthesises current understanding of ICUAW aetiology, prevalence, and clinical impact.

Theme
Nutrition & health
Subject
Other / interdisciplinary
Study type
Narrative Review
Study design
Narrative review
Source type
Peer-reviewed study
Status
Published
Geography
International
System type
Human clinical
DOI
10.1007/s00134-017-4757-5
Catalogue ID
SNmotmphoy-34nb5i

Topic tags

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