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Original Article
Pulmonary
Cinematic virtual reality for anxiety management in mechanically ventilated patients: a feasibility and pilot study
Alexander C. Haley1orcid, David A. Wacker2orcid
Acute and Critical Care 2022;37(2):230-236.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4266/acc.2021.00843
Published online: February 4, 2022

1Integrative Health and Wellbeing Research Program at the Earl E. Bakken Center for Spirituality and Healing, University of Minnesota School of Nursing, Minneapolis, MN, USA

2Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, Minneapolis, MN, USA

Corresponding author: David A. Wacker Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, 420 Delaware St SE, MMC 276, Minneapolis, MN 55455, USA Tel: +1-612-624-0999, Fax: +1-612-625-2174, E-mail: wack0012@umn.edu
• Received: June 22, 2021   • Revised: September 2, 2021   • Accepted: September 4, 2021

Copyright © 2022 The Korean Society of Critical Care Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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  • Background
    Mechanically ventilated patients experience anxiety for many reasons. Pharmacological treatments such as benzodiazepines are commonly employed to manage anxiety; however, these therapies often cause undesired side effects. Additional therapies for anxiety management are needed. We sought to determine whether cell phone-based virtual reality therapy could feasibly be used for anxiety management in mechanically ventilated patients.
  • Methods
    Mechanically ventilated subjects underwent at least one session of virtual reality therapy in which they were shown a cinematic video of an outdoor green space or blue space with 360° visual range of motion. Goal session duration was 5 minutes. The primary outcome was incidence of predefined patient safety events, including self-extubation and accidental removal of tubes or lines.
  • Results
    Ten subjects underwent a total of 18 virtual reality sessions. Fifteen sessions lasted the planned 5 minutes, one session was extended at participant request, and two sessions were terminated early at participant request. There were no occurrences of the predefined safety events, and no occurrences of cybersickness. Use of a visual analog scale to measure anxiety level was feasible for this pilot study, demonstrating feasibility of this scale for future, larger scale studies.
  • Conclusions
    Virtual reality therapy shows potential as a means of managing anxiety in patients undergoing mechanical ventilation, and further rigorous exploration with this protocol is feasible.
Mechanically ventilated patients experience acute anxiety due to dyspnea, uncomfortable stimuli such as endotracheal tubes, feelings of loss of control, and fears related to their underlying disease. Current anxiety therapies rely almost solely on pharmacotherapies such as benzodiazepines, which carry undesirable side effects and increase the risk of development of delirium [1]. Additionally, survivors of critical illness show increased incidence of chronic depression and anxiety disorders [2,3], and exposure to mechanical ventilation [4], and benzodiazepines [5] have been shown to be risk factors.
While some adjuncts such as music interventions have been explored [6-8], there remain few non-pharmacologic options for anxiety control. Over the last decade, virtual reality (VR) technology has improved in quality, decreased in cost, and become more accessible. Application of VR technology reduces perceived pain and anxiety in patients undergoing painful procedures [9-14], and it has been successfully used to promote cognitive stimulation in critically ill patients [15]. Despite these advances, VR use for mechanically ventilated patients carries safety risks such as accidental dislodgement of lines or endotracheal tubes, and cybersickness, a motion sickness-like syndrome which can occur with VR exposure consisting of symptoms of headache, nausea, vomiting, dizziness, and gastric fullness [16]. We explored the feasibility of VR for anxiolysis in mechanically ventilated patients using a single-arm prospective trial.
The study protocol was approved by the local Institutional Review Board prior to initiation, and this trial is logged at clinicaltrials.gov registry number NCT03169374. Requests for sharing of de-identified individual patient data will be honored within the constraints of the local IRB’s data sharing policies; this process can be initiated by contacting the corresponding author. Written informed consent was obtained from all study participants.
Per our inclusion and exclusion criteria each participant consented for themselves; consent from legally authorized representatives was not permitted. Participants posed any questions to investigators by writing, and all questions were answered. The consenting process concluded with a brief series of seven yes/no questions asked of the participant to ensure comprehension of the study’s purpose and protocols.
Two intensive care units (ICUs), one dedicated medical ICU at an academic center and one general ICU at a community hospital, were screened at the investigators’ convenience for patients on mechanical ventilation. Inclusion criteria were patients of age 18 years or more, on mechanical ventilation, able to maintain a spontaneous wakeful state and able to communicate with researchers. Exclusion criteria were expected liberation from the ventilator within 12 hours, delirium (as assessed by routine confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit testing), inability of the subject to consent for themselves, history of cybersickness or pre-existing symptoms of cybersickness, skull injury or surgery precluding use of the VR visor head strap, auditory or visual impairment, positive end expiratory pressure ventilator setting greater than 10 cm H2O, inability to safely remove patient restraints for VR sessions, known difficult airway, or tracheostomy placed within the previous seven days (Figure 1). Our initial enrollment goal was 30 subjects, based on guidance from the United States Food and Drug Administration for traditional feasibility studies [17].
Enrolled patients underwent at least one session of VR therapy with a goal duration of 5 minutes. This short duration was chosen to minimize the risk of cybersickness, which increases with duration of VR use [18]. Cinematic VR, in which VR is presented as 360° video via a head-mounted display (HMD), was generated using a Samsung Galaxy S7 smartphone (Samsung, Seoul, Korea) coupled with low-cost headsets (Topmaxions; Wuzhong Zhongtai Youlian Technology & Trade, Wuzhong, China), which housed the smartphone to create the HMD. Participants were issued a single headset upon enrollment to the trial, used this headset for all trial VR sessions, and were allowed to keep their headset on trial completion. Sound was provided via the smart phone speakers, rather than employing headphones. Participants were shown relaxing environments using the 360° video feature of the video streaming service YouTube. The videos used for this purpose can be found on the YouTube channel “ICU virtual reality” (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCTi6OIJkVzLk1PFi-cNPXpg). Environments consisted of various outdoor green and blue spaces, which were chosen for their positive impact on affect in prior research [19]. A single stationary camera position was used for each environment to minimize motion-induced cybersickness and to facilitate gentle, small angle head movements to explore the environment [20]. Videos played in real time via the YouTube application. Subjects were able to examine environments through gentle head movement within the constraints of ventilator hosing and other external tethers, but could not interact with any elements within the environments. While complete range of head movement is not possible with ventilated participants, the advantage of using VR over a two-dimensional monoscopic display is that the ICU environment is occluded while wearing the HMD facilitating immersion in an alternate, virtual world of nature scenes.
The primary outcome was incidence of the predefined patient safety events listed in Table 1. This collection of events has been previously determined in the physical therapy literature to be of particular concern when providing therapy to ICU patients [21]. Although VR does not involve the same vigorous movements as physical therapy, it does involve head movement and some degree of active patient participation. We therefore felt these events to be similarly important for monitoring in initial VR sessions as part of the feasibility pilot. Secondary outcomes were session duration, number of sessions per day, number of days each participant undergoes at least one session, reason for termination of sessions terminated before 5 minutes, measurement of blood pressure, pulse and respiratory rate at beginning and end of each session, incidence of cybersickness, and change in subjective anxiety levels with VR intervention as measured using the 100-point visual analog scale-anxiety (VAS-A), which has previously been validated as an assessment of anxiety levels [22] and used in studies of music interventions for mechanically ventilated patients [8]. Change in anxiety level was included as a secondary outcome to ensure feasibility of using the scoring system in this setting and for use in a larger scale efficacy trial. Standard descriptive and comparative statistical analyses were conducted on the collected primary and secondary outcomes data to ensure feasibility of this approach for a larger study. For measurements of anxiety and vital sign parameters, the differences between starting and ending values for each session (paired differences) were compared to the null set using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test. This test was used because some variables were non-normally distributed.
We screened 81 mechanically ventilated patients between November 2017 and June 2019. Fifteen of these were eligible to participate in the study and ten consented to do so (Figure 1). Of screened patients who were not eligible, inability to maintain a wakeful state or to communicate with researchers were the chief reasons for not meeting criteria. Baseline characteristics of the ten participants are shown in Table 2.
Results of our primary and secondary outcomes are listed in Table 1. A total of 18 VR sessions were performed for the ten participants; two participants had a single session, and eight participants had two sessions, each performed on separate days. Prespecified safety and cybersickness outcomes were successfully monitored according to protocol as part of feasibility. We observed no incidence of the prespecified safety outcomes, including accidental dislodgment of an endotracheal tube or tracheostomy. Additionally, no participant reported symptoms of cybersickness. Use of the 100-point VAS-A scale was feasible in this setting and showed a modest median decrease of 8.5 points following VR sessions. No participant completed more than one session per day. Five additional sessions had been planned but were not carried out for reasons listed in Table 2. Fifteen sessions lasted the planned duration of 5 minutes, and one lasted 15 minutes at participant request. Two sessions were terminated early at participant request, one because the participant felt homesick, the other participant would not give a reason.
Although our initial goal was 30, we closed the study after enrollment of ten subjects due to low rates of accrual. This was largely driven by a low prevalence of mechanically ventilated patients who were able to remain wakeful and adequately communicate with researchers to provide consent for the study and indicate anxiety levels (Figure 1).
As VR technology continues to improve, it has been increasingly utilized in the medical setting to promote patient comfort. Feasibility and effectiveness of VR interventions in the ICU setting have been explored using healthy volunteers emulating ICU patients [23,24], and using actual ICU patients who are not intubated or otherwise mechanically ventilated [25]. Additionally, use of an interactive computer program which senses patient motion as input and provides visual output through a flat panel video screen has been used to provide neurocognitive stimulation in both intubated and non-intubated patients; however this system was not fully immersive as it did not employ HMDs [15].
Use of HMDs to provide fully immersive VR for mechanically ventilated patients carries unique challenges, including the risk of accidental dislodgement of the endotracheal tube or tracheal cannula and associated sequelae [26,27] due to increased head movements, and reciprocally the possibility of reduction in enjoyability of VR sessions due to head motion restrictions imposed by ventilator hosing. Furthermore, the communication limitations imposed by mechanical ventilation can limit assessment of subjective outcomes such as pain and anxiety. This has limited the use of fully immersive VR in mechanically ventilated patients.
Although our study only comprised 10 participants undergoing 18 VR sessions, we successfully monitored prespecified safety and cybersickness outcomes, neither of which occurred during this feasibility study. Additionally, we were able to effectively utilize a 100-point VAS-A to assess patient anxiety levels before and after sessions of VR, with a median paired decrease of 8.5 points associated with VR intervention (P=0.012). While this suggests feasibility of VAS-A use in future VR studies, the low sample size and novel implementation of this pilot study prohibits any conclusions about VR effectiveness.
A major barrier to the use of VR broadly among mechanically ventilated patients was inability of patients to maintain a spontaneously wakeful state. Likely due to sedative medications and effects of underlying critical illness, the majority of patients we screened for this study were unable to meet this criterion, and we ultimately closed our enrollment prematurely because of this. More flexible study protocols, for example allowing the controlled reduction of sedatives to enable participation, may improve recruitment in future studies, but this would need to be balanced against possible undue discomfort to patients, and for the present study we did not feel this was justified.
As a feasibility pilot project, our study is limited by its small size and single-arm design. Although we did not have any safety events occur during our study, its limited size prevents us from establishing a rate at which these events will occur in a larger population. In addition, while we noted a modest decrease in subjective anxiety levels following VR sessions, interpretation of this is not warranted given the pilot nature of this study, and we certainly cannot establish a causal relationship due to the absence of a control group. Finally, enrollment was hindered by the fact that many mechanically ventilated patients were not conscious or communicative enough to participate; future studies will need to take this constraint into consideration. Despite these limitations, we feel that VR technology shows potential for anxiety management in mechanically ventilated patients as demonstrated by the implementation of this feasibility study and warrants further rigorous exploration.
▪ A pilot design of a cinematic virtual reality environment to relieve anxiety was implemented according to protocol for a pilot cohort of mechanically ventilated patients without incidence of prespecified safety outcomes including accidental extubation, and without incidence of cybersickness.
▪ A 100-point visual analog scale was successfully applied to assess subjects’ anxiety levels before and after virtual reality interventions, demonstrating feasibility of this scale for future studies.

CONFLICT OF INTEREST No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS

Conceptualization: all authors. Data curation: DAW. Formal analysis: DAW. Funding acquisition: DAW. Methodology: all authors. Project administration: DAW. Visualization: ACH. Writing–original draft: all authors. Writing–review & editing: all authors.

This project was funded by the University of Minnesota Critical Care Program and was supported by the University of Minnesota Clinical and Translational Science Institute (National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health Award Number UL1-TR002494).
We thank Dr. Craig Weinert for critically reading this manuscript.
Figure 1.
Flow diagram outlining screening and enrollment of participants, as well as inclusion and exclusion criteria. CAM-ICU: confusion assessment method for the intensive care unit; VR: virtual reality; PEEP: positive end-expiratory pressure.
acc-2021-00843f1.jpg
Table 1.
Primary and secondary outcome results
Outcome Value P-valuea
Session during which a safety event occurred (n=18 sessions)
 Cardiac arrhythmias (cardiac arrest or change to rhythm other than sinus or atrial fibrillation with rate <150) 0
 Hypotension (MAP <55) 0
 Hypertension (MAP >140) 0
 Oxygen desaturation (oxygen saturation < 85% for 3 minutes or greater) 0
 Fall from bed or chair 0
 Unintentional removal of medical device (lines, tubes, etc.) 0
Session during which cybersickness occurred (n=18 sessions)
 Subjective anxiety levels during session (100 point VAS-A scale)
  Starting 37 (19–74)
  Ending 32 (7–64)
  Pairwise differenceb –8.5 (–12.5 to –1.5) 0.012
 Heart rate during session (beats/min)
  Starting 84 (71–88)
  Ending 81 (72–79)
  Pairwise differenceb 1 (–4 to 3) 0.553
 Respiratory rate during session (beats/min)
  Starting 21 (18–26)
  Ending 19 (17–24)
  Pairwise differenceb –2 (–3 to 0) 0.079
 Systolic blood pressure during session (mm Hg)
  Starting 130 (115–140)
  Ending 118 (107–129)
  Pairwise differenceb –9 (–17 to –1) 0.003
 Diastolic blood pressure during session (mm Hg)
  Starting 70 (66–81)
  Ending 67 (60–75)
  Pairwise differenceb –4 (–12 to 1) 0.040
Reason for not performing planned sessions (n=5)
 Subject preference or scheduling conflict with other therapies 3 (60)
 Change in subject’s mental status 1 (20)
 Symptom of cybersickness present prior to session start 1 (20), dizziness

Values are presented as median (interquartile range) or number (%).

MAP: mean arterial pressure; VAS-A: visual analog scale-anxiety.

a P-values obtained using the Wilcoxon signed-rank test to compare the pairwise differences in each variable to the null set;

b Pairwise differences were determined by subtracting the variable value at the beginning of a session from that at the end of the session for each session individually. Thus a positive value represents a net increase during the session, and a negative value a net decrease.

Table 2.
Baseline characteristics of participants
Variable Value (n=10)
Age (yr) 58 (49–66)
Birth sexa
 Female 5 (50)
 Male 5 (50)
Racea
 African American or Black 2 (20)
 Caucasian 8 (80)
Ethnicity
 Hispanic or Latino 0
 Not Hispanic or Latino 10 (100)
Reason for ICU admission
 Respiratory failure, ARDS 0
 Respiratory failure, COPD exacerbation 1 (10)
 Respiratory failure, pneumonia 4 (40)
 Respiratory failure, pulmonary edema 0
 Respiratory failure, CLAD 2 (20)
 Respiratory failure, other 2 (20)
 Shock, septic 1 (10)
 Shock, non-septic 0
Total duration of ICU stay (day) 10.5 (6–14)
SOFA score at enrollmentb 3 (2–3)
Airway
 Endotracheal tube 6 (60)
 Tracheostomy 4 (40)

Values are presented as median (interquartile range) or number (%).

ICU: intensive care unit; ARDS: acute respiratory distress syndrome; COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CLAD: chronic lung allograft dysfunction; SOFA: Sequential Organ Failure Assessment.

a As reported in the subject’s medical record;

b SOFA score lab parameters were missing for three subjects; these were assumed to be normal when calculating SOFA scores.

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