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To verify whether remifentanil is more beneficial to reduce the duration of mechanical ventilation, shorten the interval from SBT to extubation, reduce the incidence of adverse events, reduce the workload of nursing staff, reduce the dosage of sedatives and ICU hospitalization costs, shorten the length of ICU hospitalization, and reduce the short-term mortality.
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Opioids are widely used for analgesia in the ICU, of which, fentanyl and remifentanil are the most commonly used. Compared with the two analgesics, fentanyl is relatively cheap, but it is metabolised by liver. Long-term infusion makes its half-life extended, and side effects increase significantly. Respiratory depression is the most serious side effect and may lead to re-intubation and even sudden death.
Remifentanil is a strong selective μ-opioid receptor agonist, rapidly metabolized by non-specific plasma and tissue esterases into inactive metabolites; it has very short context-sensitive half-life even after prolonged infusion or in patients with organ failure. Remifentanil is easy to titrate and provides excellent analgesia: it allows higher doses administration than are normally used with traditional opioids without concerns about accumulation or delayed recovery.
This feature is helpful for patients with mechanical ventilation to weaning and extubate early. Previous studies comparing the two drugs mainly focus on short-term postoperative application, and theoretically long-term use can better reflect the pharmacokinetic advantages of Remifentanil. So we designed this study.
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254 participants in 2 patient groups
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Jian-Xin Zhou, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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