Muscle weakness after critical illness: unravelling biological
mechanisms and clinical hurdles
Critical Care volume 29,
Article number: 248 (2025)
Abstract
Survivors of intensive care unit (ICU) are increasingly
numerous because of better hospital care. However, several consequences of an
ICU stay, known as post-intensive care syndrome, worsen long-term prognoses. A
predominant feature in survivors is reduced muscle strength, mass, and physical
function. This leads to lower exercise capacity, long-lasting physical
disability, higher mortality risk, and subsequent health costs. While
ICU-acquired muscle weakness has been extensively studied these past decades, underlying
mechanisms of post-ICU muscle weakness remain poorly understood, and there is
still no evidence-based treatment for improving long-term physical outcomes.
One hypothesis, among others, could be that the pathophysiology is dynamic over
time, differing between the acute ICU and post-ICU recovery periods. This
narrative review aims to address the clinical, physiological and biological
determinants of persistent muscle dysfunction in ICU survivors, with particular
attention to the molecular, cellular and systemic mechanisms involved.
Specifically, pre-ICU health factors such as obesity and sarcopenia,
ICU-related complications and treatments, and post-ICU management all influence
recovery. Dysfunctions in the neuroendocrine, vascular, neurological, and
muscle systems contribute as physiological determinants of the muscle weakness.
Complex and multifaceted biological mechanisms drive the post-ICU muscle
dysfunction with mitochondrial and autophagy dysfunction, epigenetic
modifications, cellular senescence, muscle inflammation with altered cell–cell
communication, including dysfunction of immune cells, stem cell exhaustion and
extracellular matrix remodelling. The review also sheds light on new and
innovative therapeutic approaches and discusses future research directions.
Emphasis is placed on the potential for multi-approach treatments that
integrate nutritional, physical, and biological interventions. Addressing these
aspects in a holistic and dynamic manner, from ICU to post-ICU phases, may
provide avenues for mitigating the long-term burden of muscle weakness and
physical disability in ICU survivors.
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