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Atelectasis Formation Using HFJV During Stereotactic Solid Organ Ablations

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Karolinska Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

High Frequency Jet Ventilation
Atelectasis

Treatments

Procedure: HFJV

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03378752
2017/1158-32

Details and patient eligibility

About

Atelectasis formation using HFJV during stereotactic solid organ ablations.

Primary endpoint will be to study the formation of atelectasis during HFJV. Secondary endpoint will be to study liver displacement over time. Reference groups will be found in previous published articles as referred to above.

Materials and methods: A radiological protocol has been made for the CT-scanner to take 10 cm volume Scans of the lower part of the lung. The scans will have its' lower border tangential to the top of the diaphragm. The first scan will be performed in the same session as the routine scan of the liver is performed after the patient is anesthetized. These Scans will then be repeated every 15 minute during the first 45 minutes. Arterial bloodgas analysis, transcutaneous CO2, blood pressure, saturation as well as parameters from the jet ventilator and the standard ventilator will be recorded.

Full description

The use of HFJV in abdominal surgery as well as in out-of-operating theatre environment, is not well studied. In percutaneous liver thermal ablation the patient is anesthetized and intubated on the CT-bed where the liver ablation procedure is performed. Atelectasis is formed as soon as the patient is supine. Anesthesia itself also contributes to this. In extreme cases almost half the lung can be collapsed during anaesthesia, before any surgery has taken place.

The investigators have noticed that during this specific surgery, dynamic lung compliance does not necessarily worsen during HFJV but rather being unchanged or in some cases even becoming better and want to study this further and investigate the formation of atelectasis during HFJV. There are studies where atelectasis has been measured in a similar way as in this planned study, that is, with thin axial CT-scans at representative levels of the lung. This is during conventional lung ventilation, and has not yet been studied during HFJV.

Inclusion criteria: A total of n= 25 patients planned for elective liver tumor thermal ablation will be recruited after written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria: Patients 1/ under the age of 50 years, 2/with severe, poorly controlled lung disease.

The lung images will be saved in DICOM format and the tissue density will be analysed quantitatively. For each scan, the inner contour of each hemithorax will be manually drawn, excluding the chest wall, mediastinum, pleural effusions, and regions representing partial volume effects. Liver displacement can be measured from the routine CT-scans taken before and after the procedure.

Statistical methods: Chi2-analysis will be used to calculate the percentage of atelectasis in the lung.

Power calculation: Since the rate of atelectasis formation in the study groups is not known, it is impossible to perform power calculation for this trial. This study may clarify this issue in the planning of further studies.

This study may contribute to more knowledge about HFJV and its' effect on lung physiology, it may also contribute as a generator of new hypothesis and it might be a follow up study where the effect of alveolar recruitment maneuver (ARM) is studied.

Enrollment

25 patients

Sex

All

Ages

50+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • All consecutive patients admitted to and by the surgeon planned for liver thermal ablation with cascination navigation system (requiring high frequency jet ventilation) from start date 25th of October, until a total number of 25 patients are included.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age < 50 years old. Severe lung disease.

Trial design

25 participants in 1 patient group

Atelectasis formation using HFJV
Description:
Computed tomography scans are performed every 15 minute during the first 45 minutes during general anaesthesia using high frequency jet ventilation.
Treatment:
Procedure: HFJV

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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