This article provides an overview of the utilization of ventricular assist devices (VADs), reviews the common features of VADs and management of VAD recipients, discusses clinical considerations in the rehabilitation process, and describes the role of the acute care physical therapist in the care of VAD recipients. With more than 5 million people in the United States with heart failure, and with a limited ability to manage the progressive and debilitating nature of heart failure, VADs are becoming more commonplace. In order to prescribe a comprehensive and effective plan of care, the physical therapist needs to understand the type and function of the VADs and the goals of the VAD program. The goals for the physical therapist are: (1) to deliver comprehensive rehabilitation services to patients on VAD support, (2) to develop an understanding of the role of functional mobility in recovery, and (3) to understand how preoperative physical function may contribute to the VAD selection process. The acute care physical therapist has an increasing role in providing a complex range of rehabilitation services, as well as serving as a welleducated resource to physical therapists across the health care spectrum, as more VAD recipients are living in the community. © 2013 American Physical Therapy Association.
CITATION STYLE
Wells, C. L. (2013). Physical therapist management of patients with ventricular assist devices: Key considerations for the acute care physical therapist. Physical Therapy, 93(2), 266–278. https://doi.org/10.2522/ptj.20110408
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