The Role of Multidisciplinary Rehabilitation in ICU Recovery

by kh-ima-admin | December 9, 2025 7:27 am

Rehabilitative therapy in the ICU is a structured, multidisciplinary approach designed to prevent or reduce the sequelae of critical illness such as ICU-acquired weakness (ICUAW), cognitive dysfunction, dysphagia, psychological distress, and long-term functional disability. The goal is not only survival, but functional recovery and quality of life.

Modern ICU rehabilitation begins as early as the patient is physiologically stable—a paradigm shift from the older “prolonged rest” model.

Why Rehabilitation Matters in Critical Care

Critically ill patients face multiple challenges:

  • A. Immobility & Muscle Loss

    • Patients can lose 2–4% muscle mass per day of immobility.
    • ICUAW occurs in up to 40–50% of mechanically ventilated patients.
    • Leads to delayed weaning, prolonged ICU stay, and long-term disability.
  • B. Neurological & Cognitive Dysfunction

    • Delirium, hypoxia, sedative exposure → cognitive deficits
    • Problems with memory, attention, executive function
    • May last months to years (Post–Intensive Care Syndrome, PICS)
  • C. Pulmonary Complications

    • Atelectasis, diaphragm atrophy (“ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction”)
    • Difficulty weaning from ventilator
  • D. Dysphagia

    • Prolonged intubation → laryngeal injury
    • Silent aspiration → pneumonia
  • E. Psychological Morbidity

    • Anxiety, depression, PTSD
    • Sleep disruption from noise, sedation, illness
  • F. Reduced Functional Independence

    • Even young patients may become dependent in ADLs
    • Higher readmission rates

Thus, rehabilitation aims to prevent secondary harm, not just treat primary illness.

2. Key Components of Rehabilitative Therapy in the ICU

Rehabilitation in ICU is holistic and spans physical, respiratory, cognitive, and psychological aspects.

A. Physical Rehabilitation

  1. Early Mobilization (Core Component)

Started once the patient is hemodynamically stable.

Stages include:

  1. Passive ROM exercises (for deeply sedated or paralyzed patients)
  2. Active-assisted & active exercises
  3. Sitting up in bed → Chair sitting
  4. Standing with assistance
  5. Marching on spot → Ambulation

Benefits:

  • Reduces ICUAW
  • Shortens mechanical ventilation duration
  • Reduces delirium
  • Improves functional outcomes
  • Shortens ICU/hospital stay
  1. Neuromuscular Electrical Stimulation (NMES)
  • Used for patients unable to mobilize early
  • Preserves muscle mass
  • Prevents contractures

B. Respiratory Rehabilitation

  1. Airway Clearance Techniques
    • Chest physiotherapy
    • Active cycle breathing
    • Postural drainage
  2. Diaphragm Strengthening
    • Inspiratory muscle training
    • Avoid unnecessary deep sedation
    • Early spontaneous breathing trials
  3. Ventilator Synchrony Optimization
    • Helps mobilization and respiratory comfort

Occupational Therapy (OT)

Focus: Helping patients regain functional independence.

OT interventions:

  • Assistance with ADLs (feeding, grooming, toileting)
  • Cognitive stimulation tasks
  • Energy conservation techniques
  • Positioning and splinting to prevent contractures
  • Communication aids for intubated patients

D. Cognitive Rehabilitation

Critical illness often impairs attention, memory, and executive function.

Strategies:

  • Reorientation: clocks, calendars, communication
  • Light exposure for circadian alignment
  • Cognitive exercises for attention and memory
  • Use of ICU diaries to reduce PTSD and confusion
  • Minimize sedative exposure

E. Speech & Swallow Rehabilitation

Performed by Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs).

Focus areas:

  • Dysphagia assessment post-extubation
  • Swallow strengthening exercises
  • Communication support for intubated/tracheostomy patients
  • Avoiding aspiration pneumonia

F. Psychological Support

A heavily underestimated aspect of ICU care.

Interventions:

  • Screening for anxiety and delirium
  • Family involvement in care
  • Strategies to reduce sensory overload
  • Sleep promotion: dim lights, reduce noise, maintain circadian rhythm
  • Trauma-informed care to prevent PTSD

 

3. Importance of Multidisciplinary Team (MDT) in ICU Rehabilitation

Rehabilitation is not the responsibility of a single discipline. It requires a coordinated effort across multiple specialties.

Why MDT Is Essential

  1. Complexity of Critical Illness

No single professional can address the spectrum of:

  • Physical deconditioning
  • Respiratory dependence
  • Psychological distress
  • Communication impairment
  • Nutritional deficits
  1. Safety

Mobilizing ventilated or hemodynamically unstable patients needs:

  • Physiotherapists
  • Nurses
  • Respiratory therapists
  • Doctors

Each has a role in monitoring vitals, ventilator settings, fluid status.

  1. Continuity of Care

ICU stays often lead into ward-based rehab. MDT ensures smooth transition.

  1. Structured MDT-Based Rehabilitation Framework: The ABCDEF Bundle

A standardized approach integrating rehabilitation:

A – Assess, prevent, manage pain B – Both spontaneous awakening & breathing trials C – Choice of sedatives D – Delirium assessment & prevention E – Early mobility F – Family engagement

This bundle directly connects supportive care with rehabilitation goals.

Conclusion

Rehabilitative therapy in the ICU is not optional—it is central to modern critical care. Early, structured, and multidisciplinary rehabilitation significantly improves both short-term outcomes (ventilator days, ICU stay) and long-term functional recovery.

A coordinated MDT effort ensures that critically ill patients not only survive but return to meaningful life with physical, cognitive, and psychosocial well-being.

Core Evidence for ICU Rehabilitation & Early Mobilization

  1. Bailey P, Thomsen GE, Spuhler VJ, et al. Early activity is feasible and safe in respiratory failure patients. Crit Care Med. 2007;35(1):139–145. – First major study proving safety of early mobilization in ventilated patients.
  2. Morris PE, Goad A, Thompson C, et al. Early intensive care unit mobility therapy in the treatment of acute respiratory failure: a randomized controlled trial. Lancet. 2008;371(9607):126–127. – Landmark RCT showing reduced ICU/hospital stay.
  3. Schweickert WD, Pohlman MC, Pohlman AS, et al. Early physical and occupational therapy in mechanically ventilated, critically ill patients: a randomized controlled trial. Lancet. 2009;373(9678):1874–1882. – Demonstrated improvements in functional independence at discharge.
  4. Latronico N, Bolton CF. Critical illness polyneuropathy and myopathy: a major cause of muscle weakness and paralysis. Lancet Neurol. 2011;10(10):931–941.
  5. Jaber S, Petrof BJ, Jung B, et al. Rapidly progressive diaphragm weakness in mechanically ventilated humans. N Engl J Med. 2011;365:1106–1115.
  6. Marra A, Ely EW, Pandharipande PP, Patel MB. The ABCDEF Bundle in Critical Care. Crit Care Clin. 2017;33(2):225–243. – Standardized framework integrating mobility, delirium prevention, and MDT collaboration.
  7. Ely EW, Inouye SK, Bernard GR, et al. Delirium in mechanically ventilated patients: validity and reliability of the CAM-ICU. JAMA. 2001;286:2703–2710. – Basis for delirium monitoring in MDT care.
Dr Muralitharan

Dr. Muralitharan
Associate Consultant Critical Care Medicine,
Kauvery Hospital, Chennai.[1]

Endnotes:
  1. Kauvery Hospital, Chennai.: https://www.kauveryhospital.com/

Source URL: https://www.kauveryhospital.com/ima-journal/ima-journal-december-2025/the-role-of-multidisciplinary-rehabilitation-in-icu-recovery/