Clinical Experience with the Erigo
Clinical Experience with the Erigo® |
Clinical Integration of the Erigo: Clinical Institute of Brain, Ekaterinburg, Russia |
Prof. Andrey Belkin, Director and Chief Neurologist We have been using the Erigo since 2014 with all our patients who display orthostatic intolerance in a very acute phase after neurological incidents. Thanks to the unique stimulation and the ability to challenge each patient to his own limit, we observe very good outcomes following only two weeks of Erigo therapy. We follow a very rigorous and challenging approach with the Erigo. In the capable hands of a specialized team, the Erigo is safe and feasible for very early mobilization and stimulation even with very Erigo Therapy Team, Clinical Institute of Brain, Ekaterinburg, Russia critical patients. |
Patient Group
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Most patients are acute neurocritical care patients coming into our clinic a few days or weeks post incident. This means we are treating a rather fragile patient population with about one-third of them being artificially ventilated. Our main goal in the patient group with severe brain injuries is to improve cardiovascular stability in order to enable a safe transfer to a chair. Another objective, mainly in comatose, vegetative state or minimally conscious state patients, is to improve consciousness.
Prescription: Inclusion Criteria
We use the Erigo to train the cardiovascular system of all patients who cannot be treated on a conventional tilt table without medication that stabilizes blood pressure (inotropes). The Erigo enables us to support the cardiovascular system of the patient as much as needed in order to train the upright posture most efficiently.
Our clinical team is well trained by neurocritical care experts. We are convinced that the Erigo’s benefits outweigh the risks and, therefore, we transfer even very fragile patients to the Erigo. Our state-of-the-art hemodynamic monitoring systems, as well as the availability of physicians, allow a safe patient handling on the Erigo.
Duration and Frequency of Erigo Sessions
Usually, patients stay in our clinic for two weeks as this period is covered by their health insurance.
During this time the patients receive at least 5 Erigo sessions. Our experience shows that in most patients 5 - 7 Erigo sessions are enough in order to reach our goal of cardiovascular stability. If treatment at our institute is extended, patients can get up to 20 Erigo sessions.
The duration of the first Erigo session including transfers, setup and stepping time, is between 60 and 90 minutes. During this time we assess the patient’s metabolism, respiratory function and electroencephalogram in addition to our standard hemodynamic monitoring. Even during the first session, our goal is to achieve a full 90-degree verticalization. Therefore, the duration of the session is unique to each patient, but is usually between 30 to 40 minutes.
Our Erigo is used for up to 10 sessions per week. The rest of the time we store it in a separate room together with other exercise equipment.
Patient Evaluation
In order to evaluate the patient’s cardiovascular capacity, we assess the duration the patient can step while on the Erigo at a tilt angle of 90 degrees without inotropic support (medication) during every Erigo session. We assess orthostatic tolerance through clinical symptoms (dizziness, sweating, etc.), hemodynamics, such as blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation, and cerebral blood flow velocity via a Transcranial Doppler. Thanks to the meticulous monitoring, our approach allows us to work very close to the patient’s performance limit in every Erigo
session and, therefore, provides an optimal training stimulus. If the patient is able to tolerate a whole therapy session at a tilt angle of 90 degrees, he is normally also stable enough to be transferred to a chair without any orthostatic problems. If this is the case, we end Erigo treatment.
Organization: Responsible Therapy Team
Our Erigo team consists of three medical experts. The implementation of the Erigo into our daily clinical routine needs a specialized, well-trained team consisting of a physiotherapist, a neurocritical care physician and a neurophysiologist.
The Erigo is only used in our critical care department where we have 6 beds that are always used to capacity.
Patient treated with the Erigo at Clinical Institute of Brain
Other therapies provided in addition to Erigo
During the stay in our neurocritical care department the patients who get Erigo therapy also get occupational therapy, conventional physiotherapy (manual mobilization and with bicycles), speech therapy and cognitive training by neuropsychologists. In addition, we have a special multi-sensory room for augmented sensory stimulation (video, smells, tactile stimulation, etc.) in order to increase consciousness of the patients.
Reasons to Include the Erigo as Part of the Therapy Program
· Excellent results in terms of cardiovascular stabilization
· Prevention of arterial blood pressure drop in the upright posture
· Erigo FES improves muscle strength and functional recovery in patients with paresis in lower extremities
In addition to the clinical implementation of the Erigo, our institute is also conducting research with it. We are comparing the effect of Erigo training (including FES) to conventional tilt-table and cycling training on improvement of awareness in patients with disorders of consciousness. Our main outcome measures with regard to awareness are: Coma Recovery Scale- Revised (CRS-R), electroencephalography and cerebral blood flow. Additional outcome measures are: length of stay, complications, duration of ventilation, motor evoked potentials, sensory evoked potentials and hemodynamics.
Billing and Financial Compensation of Erigo Therapy
The health insurance covers a two-week stay in our specialized clinic. After that, private, additional insurances, funds or the patients and their relatives themselves have to cover the costs if they stay longer.
Watch the Video of our Clinical Experience with the Erigo here.
Note: This clinical experience report is meant to serve as an example of how the Erigo is integrated into a critical care setting in one particular hospital. It is not necessarily a standard recommendation from Hocoma.
Patient group |
· Neurocritical care patients, intensive care unit-acquired weakness, post-intensive care syndrome |
Inclusion criteria |
· Orthostatic intolerance that doesn’t allow treatment on a conventional tilt table |
Duration and frequency |
· 5 sessions over 2 weeks |
Patient evaluation |
· Tolerated training duration at 90° verticalization, hemodynamics (BP, HR, O2, CBF) |
Organization: Responsible therapy team |
· A specialized team including intensive care specialists. such as a PT, a neurocritical care physician and a neurophysiologist |
Other therapies provided in addition to Erigo |
· OT, PT, speech therapy, cognitive training, augmented sensory stimulation |
Reasons to include Erigo in the therapy program |
· Cardiovascular stabilization · Safe and effective mobilization in a very early phase of recovery · Optimal individual challenge for severely affected patients |
Billing and financial compensation |
· 2 weeks paid by insurance |