Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up

Objective: To follow up the long-term outcome in return-to-work (RTW) rate in burn-injury patients, and to determine the degree of impairment in pulmonary and muscular function and exercise tolerance. Design: A prospective, longitudinal follow-up study without a control group....

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Main Authors: Viveca Björnhagen, Kristina Schüldt Ekholm, Flemming Larsen, Jan Ekholm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Foundation for Rehabilitation Information 2018-04-01
Series:Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access: https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2337
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spelling doaj-442e6eae5b224c3cb895c74bf876ff732020-11-25T00:54:17ZengFoundation for Rehabilitation InformationJournal of Rehabilitation Medicine1650-19771651-20812018-04-0150546547110.2340/16501977-23372415Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-upViveca Björnhagen0Kristina Schüldt EkholmFlemming LarsenJan Ekholm Kliniken för rekonstruktiv plastkirurgi, Karolinska Universitetssjukhuset, Solna, Sweden. Objective: To follow up the long-term outcome in return-to-work (RTW) rate in burn-injury patients, and to determine the degree of impairment in pulmonary and muscular function and exercise tolerance. Design: A prospective, longitudinal follow-up study without a control group. Patients: Twenty-five burn-injury patients referred for medical-vocational rehabilitation. Methods: Return-to-work rate was followed after completed medical-vocational rehabilitation. Pulmonary function was evaluated with spirometry, diffusing capacity and radio spirometry. Exercise capacity was determined using a bicycle ergometer. Muscle functions evaluated in the arms and legs were: isokinetic torque, isometric strength, endurance and muscular strength utilization. Results: Return-to-work rate was 87%. During bicycle exercise tests the patients, on average, reached their expected workloads. The dominating lung func-tion abnormality observed on lung scintigraphy was delayed wash-out time of inhaled radioactive xenon gas, suggesting airway obstruction. All tests of shoulder-flexor and knee-extensor muscle function showed large minimum–maximum differences. Mean isometric endurance of shoulder flexors was lower than mean of references, and isokinetic knee extensor torques were slightly lower. Conclusion: High return-to-work rates can be achieved after burn injury requiring hospital-ward care. Despite measurable impairments in muscle strength/endurance and pulmonary function in a substantial proportion of these patients, overall normal bicycle exercise capacity was observed except for a few cases. https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2337 burninjuryreturntoworkmedicalrehabilitationvocationalrehabilitationcardio-pulmonaryexercisecapacitylungscintigraphypulmonaryfunctionmusclefunction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Viveca Björnhagen
Kristina Schüldt Ekholm
Flemming Larsen
Jan Ekholm
spellingShingle Viveca Björnhagen
Kristina Schüldt Ekholm
Flemming Larsen
Jan Ekholm
Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
burninjury
returntowork
medicalrehabilitation
vocationalrehabilitation
cardio-pulmonaryexercisecapacity
lungscintigraphy
pulmonaryfunction
musclefunction
author_facet Viveca Björnhagen
Kristina Schüldt Ekholm
Flemming Larsen
Jan Ekholm
author_sort Viveca Björnhagen
title Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
title_short Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
title_full Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
title_fullStr Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
title_full_unstemmed Burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: A long-term follow-up
title_sort burn survivors’ pulmonary and muscular impairment, exercise tolerance and return-to-work following medical-vocational rehabilitation: a long-term follow-up
publisher Foundation for Rehabilitation Information
series Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine
issn 1650-1977
1651-2081
publishDate 2018-04-01
description Objective: To follow up the long-term outcome in return-to-work (RTW) rate in burn-injury patients, and to determine the degree of impairment in pulmonary and muscular function and exercise tolerance. Design: A prospective, longitudinal follow-up study without a control group. Patients: Twenty-five burn-injury patients referred for medical-vocational rehabilitation. Methods: Return-to-work rate was followed after completed medical-vocational rehabilitation. Pulmonary function was evaluated with spirometry, diffusing capacity and radio spirometry. Exercise capacity was determined using a bicycle ergometer. Muscle functions evaluated in the arms and legs were: isokinetic torque, isometric strength, endurance and muscular strength utilization. Results: Return-to-work rate was 87%. During bicycle exercise tests the patients, on average, reached their expected workloads. The dominating lung func-tion abnormality observed on lung scintigraphy was delayed wash-out time of inhaled radioactive xenon gas, suggesting airway obstruction. All tests of shoulder-flexor and knee-extensor muscle function showed large minimum–maximum differences. Mean isometric endurance of shoulder flexors was lower than mean of references, and isokinetic knee extensor torques were slightly lower. Conclusion: High return-to-work rates can be achieved after burn injury requiring hospital-ward care. Despite measurable impairments in muscle strength/endurance and pulmonary function in a substantial proportion of these patients, overall normal bicycle exercise capacity was observed except for a few cases.
topic burninjury
returntowork
medicalrehabilitation
vocationalrehabilitation
cardio-pulmonaryexercisecapacity
lungscintigraphy
pulmonaryfunction
musclefunction
url https://www.medicaljournals.se/jrm/content/html/10.2340/16501977-2337
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