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Apneic Oxygenation Via Nasal Cannulae Prevents Arterial Hypoxemia

U

University of Manitoba

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hypoxia

Treatments

Other: Nasal oxygen therapy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00782977
B2008:129

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of continuous oxygen provided by nasal prongs in preventing or delaying hypoxemia during the apneic period that occurs after induction of general anesthesia. This will be evaluated by measuring the arterial oxygen tension (PaO2).

The study will also evaluate whether there is any difference in PaO2 when using nasal prongs with flow rates of 5 L/minute versus 10 L/minute of oxygen.

Full description

Certain patient populations are at risk for rapid desaturation and the rapid development of hypoxemia (eg. morbidly obese and pregnant patients). Using pulse oximetry, it has already been shown that oxygen provided with a catheter inserted into the nasopharynx is effective in delaying the desaturation that occurs with apnea before the trachea is intubated. It has also been shown that apneic oxygenation with nasal prongs at 5 L/min during fibreoptic intubation can delay the onset of hypoxemia.

The study will evaluate whether there is any significant difference in the PaO2 (arterial oxygen tension, as measured by an arterial blood gas) when nasal prongs are used to provide apneic oxygenation in paralyzed patients at flows of 5 L/min compared to 10 L/min.

The study aims to demonstrate that apneic oxygenation using nasal prongs is effective in preventing or delaying hypoxemia (by measuring PaO2), and that this technique may be used to prevent morbidity and mortality in all clinical areas (not only in the Operating Room environment) where airway management is undertaken.

Enrollment

90 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 65 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Healthy males and females
  2. ASA Class 1-3
  3. Ages of 18 to 65
  4. Elective surgery under general anesthesia
  5. No evidence of significant cardiac, respiratory or gastrointestinal disease
  6. No contraindications to the insertion of a radial arterial catheter

Exclusion criteria

  1. Evidence of a difficult airway (expected difficult intubation identified from patient history or clinical examination)
  2. Features suggestive of difficult bag mask ventilation
  3. Significant GERD requiring medical therapy
  4. Significant respiratory disease (including severe asthma or COPD, oxygen dependency, pulmonary hypertension)
  5. Significant cardiac disease (ischemic heart disease, severe aortic and mitral stenosis and/or regurgitation, EF < 50% if known)
  6. Inability to lie flat (skeletal deformities, orthopnea, congestive cardiac failure)
  7. PaO2 < 200 mmHg on ABG after adequate preoxygenation to an ETO2 > 85%
  8. Hemoglobin < 100 g/L
  9. BMI > 40 kg/ m2
  10. Pregnancy
  11. Patient unwillingness or refusal to participate
  12. Inability to consent (dementia) or cooperate (mentally challenged)
  13. Inability to communicate well or to understand English (language barrier, dysphasia)
  14. Neuromuscular disorders
  15. Known or presumed cervical spine instability (cervical spine fractures, rheumatoid arthritis)
  16. Patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures
  17. Any clinical or radiological evidence of increase in intracranial pressure
  18. Any requirement for rapid sequence intubation
  19. Inability to tolerate the apneic period
  20. Allergy to any of the agents used for induction of general anesthesia in the study
  21. Arterial insufficiency with poor collateral circulation to the hand (tested with Doppler ultrasound or clinically by palpation with the Allen test)
  22. Inability to cannulate an artery for monitoring and sampling purposes
  23. Uncorrected coagulopathy
  24. Baseline hypercarbia (PaCO2 > 50 mmHg)
  25. Known or suspected obstructive sleep apnea
  26. Significant nasal obstruction

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

90 participants in 3 patient groups

1
Sham Comparator group
Description:
Nasal cannulae with no oxygen flow
Treatment:
Other: Nasal oxygen therapy
2
Active Comparator group
Description:
Nasal cannulae with oxygen flow at 5 L/minute
Treatment:
Other: Nasal oxygen therapy
3
Active Comparator group
Description:
Nasal cannulae with oxygen flow at 10 L/minute
Treatment:
Other: Nasal oxygen therapy

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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