ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Cerebral Circulation in Critically Ill Children (CIRCU-REAPED)

A

Assistance Publique - Hôpitaux de Paris

Status

Completed

Conditions

Shock
Arterial Hypotension
Cerebral Lesion

Treatments

Device: Cardiac output assessment
Device: Near InfraRed Spectroscopy assessment
Device: Transcranial Doppler Ultrasound assessment

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03731104
2018-A01392-53

Details and patient eligibility

About

The principal purpose of this study is to describe the changes in cerebral circulation (assessed by transcranial ultrasound) and oxygenation (assessed by Near InfraRed spectroscopy, NIRS) during resuscitation for hemodynamic failure (arterial hypotension or shock) in critically ill children treated with vasoactive or inotropic drugs.

The secondary objectives are :

i) to evaluate the association between an alteration of cerebral circulation and/or oxygenation and an alteration in macro-circulatory parameters (Mean Arterial Blood Pressure and cardiac output) or a bad outcome, ii) to study if cerebral autoregulation is impaired

Full description

Pediatric shock is a frequent and serious cause of hospitalization in pediatric intensive care unit that can lead to multi-organ failure and death.

Its early recognition improves patients' outcome, as well as the establishment of targeted guidelines pursuing normalization of macro-circulatory parameters (ie blood pressure and lactate).

However, regional hypoperfusion leading to organ failure can be present before the alteration of these parameters, and persist after their restoration.

Brain lesions are common in critically ill children with cerebral hypoperfusion, since they may have impaired autoregulation and permeable blood-brain barrier. Vasoactive and inotropic drugs used for hemodynamic resuscitation should restore systemic and regional circulation, but may be inadequate on brain perfusion because of i) their variable and unpredictable cardiovascular effects , and ii) a strong interindividual variability between patients. As such, the impact of this medication on cerebral circulation and oxygenation is unknown.

Monitoring cerebral circulation and oxygenation during a hemodynamic resuscitation using catecholamines is a first step to identify risk factors of an altered brain perfusion, and to improve treatment of shock.

Enrollment

27 patients

Sex

All

Ages

Under 18 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

Neonates and children from 0 to 18 years old hospitalized in pediatric intensive care unit (PICU) with hemodynamic failure requiring vasoactive or inotropic treatment. This includes :

  • shock (tachycardia, troubles of peripheral perfusion with capillary refill time >3 sec, oliguria, with or without alteration of consciousness or arterial hypotension)
  • isolated arterial hypotension if it needs medical treatment to readjust balance between oxygen demand and oxygen consumption

Exclusion criteria

  • primitive cerebral lesion: traumatic or neurosurgical (including brain death states)
  • preterm neonates of less than 37 weeks gestational age
  • patients already receiving more than one catecholamine
  • patients too instable, defined by a respiratory instability (pulse oxymetry of less than 80% during more than 5 minutes) and/or hemodynamic instability (variability of blood pressure and heart rate of more than 50%) and/or cardiorespiratory arrest.

Trial contacts and locations

3

Loading...

Central trial contact

Meryl VEDRENNE-CLOQUET, MD; Hélène MOREL

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2025 Veeva Systems