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Continuous vs Intermittent Monitoring of Respiratory and Heart Rate in Relation to Length of Stay (CIM-LOS)

Karolinska Institute logo

Karolinska Institute

Status

Completed

Conditions

Perioperative Complication
Surgery-Complications
Perioperative/Postoperative Complications

Treatments

Device: Checkpoint Cardio wireless continuous monitoring device

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06973044
Nightingale RR study

Details and patient eligibility

About

Is heart rate and respiratory rate measured continuously with a new wireless sensor better as compared to standard care, with manually measured spot checks by nurses on general wards?

Does continuous monitoring detect more abnormal respiratory- and heart rate? Are abnormal values associated with increased lenght of stay?

Full description

Tachypnea is not just a sign of ventilatory problems with hypoxia, but also a precursor of sepsis, metabolic acidosis and severe pain reflecting its role as an indicator of severe derangement in many body systems. A high respiratory rate has been shown to be the most reliable vital sign to predict clinical deterioration, cardiac arrest and is even associated with higher mortality rates. Despite this, it is the vital parameter most neglected; poorly documented or not recorded at all. Studies have shown that respiratory rate is measured in less than half of cases consequently jeopardizing patient safety. The lack of understanding why respiratory rate is important and its superiority to pulse oximetry in predicting clinical deterioration may be one of the reasons why it is not measured accurately.

Badawy and colleagues stated in their study "Is everyone really breathing 20 times a minute?" that respiratory rate was inaccurately recorded and had little variation in the recordings, even in patients with cardiopulmonary compromise, findings that's been supported with later studies. Respiratory rate has traditionally not been objectively measured in general wards, but instead calculated manually over 30 seconds or a minute. This could be changed by new wireless monitoring technology. A recent large study showed that continuous measured respiratory rate together with heart rate and age in a clinical deterioration model outperformed traditional early warning scores in predicting ICU admission.

The present study evaluates heart rate and respiratory rate measured continuously with a new wireless sensor as compared to standard care, with manually measured spot checks by nurses on general wards.

Enrollment

46 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. ≥ 18 years of age
  2. planned to go through a major high-risk surgery
  3. American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class 2-4 due to present comorbidities
  4. planned to stay in the postoperative high dependency unit for >12hours where they also would have wired continuous monitoring.

Exclusion criteria

  1. pregnancy
  2. presence of implantable defibrillator or pacemaker
  3. allergy to skin adhesives

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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