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Revealing biological mechanisms leading to respiratory muscle dysfunction is essential to improve clinical outcomes in patients with critical illness. The purpose was to identify biological mechanisms associated with respiratory muscle dysfunction in patients with critical illness during mechanical ventilation or sepsis. Six databases were electronically searched from inception to January 2025, examining studies with muscle biopsies. Screening, data collection, and risk-of-bias were conducted in duplicate by two independent assessors. Meta-analysis was performed to determine differences in muscle biological parameters of patients with critical illness requiring mechanical ventilation compared with controls. From 22,036 titles screened, eight studies (n = 187 patients and n = 161 controls) published between 2000 and 2024 met eligibility criteria. Muscle biopsies were taken between days 1 and 7 in the intensive care unit from the diaphragm (n = 110; 3 studies), rectus abdominis (n = 68; 5 studies), external intercostal (n = 10; 1 study), and latissimus dorsi (n = 3; 1 study). Diaphragmatic fiber cross-sectional area was 30% smaller (mean difference [95% confidence interval] = -629 [-876, -382] μm2), with lower proportion of type II fibers (-1.94 [-3.40, -0.49]%) compared with controls. Diaphragmatic fiber force of patients was more than two standard deviations lower (standardized mean difference = -2.49 [-3.84, -1.14]), and ubiquitinated protein levels were higher (2.09 [-0.14, 4.32]) than controls. Extramyocellular, mitochondrial, and gene expression parameters were assessed in some studies, but low sample size and high heterogeneity prevented meta-analyses. In conclusion, muscle biopsies from ventilated patients revealed atrophy, contractile weakness, and proteolysis markers. Standardized methodologies assessing respiratory muscles are needed to clarify biological mechanisms leading to muscle dysfunction and to guide respiratory muscle interventions.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1152/japplphysiol.01125.2025

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2026-04-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

140

Pages

1055 - 1068

Total pages

13

Keywords

critical illness, diaphragm, mechanical ventilation, muscle biopsy, sepsis, Humans, Respiration, Artificial, Respiratory Muscles, Critical Illness, Diaphragm