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Hypobaria and Traumatic Pneumothorax

Intermountain Health Care, Inc. logo

Intermountain Health Care, Inc.

Status

Completed

Conditions

Pneumothorax

Treatments

Other: hypobaric chamber

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01670942
IRB#1024157

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this research is to see if people who have had a collapsed lung that has been re-expanded can be safely taken to an elevation that a person might experience while in a commercial airplane without having their lung partially collapse again, or have any symptoms such as feeling short of breath or having oxygen levels in the blood decrease while at the simulated altitude.

The investigators hypothesize that subjects who have had a collapsed lung that has been re-expanded will not have any adverse symptoms or signs while subjected to a simulated altitude of 8400 feet (565mm Hg) or 12650 ft (471mm Hg).

Full description

The investigators will study patients who have been diagnosed with a unilateral traumatic pneumothorax that has been treated. Treatment for pneumothorax may consist of high-flow oxygen therapy in the case of very small or "occult" pneumothorax, or tube thoracostomy ("chest tube") in the case of larger pneumothorax. Treatment for pneumothorax will be at the discretion of the attending trauma surgeon. Once the pneumothorax has radiographically resolved, the chest tube, if used, has been removed, and prior to discharge from the hospital, subjects will undergo a two hour stay in a hypobaric chamber. In the first phase of the study, they will undergo a two hour stay in a hypobaric chamber at a barometric pressure of 565mm Hg, simulating the change in pressure from Salt Lake City to a cruising airliner. If subjects in the first phase do not suffer any adverse events, the investigators will proceed with the second phase. In the second phase of the study, subjects will undergo a two hour stay in the hypobaric chamber at a barometric pressure of 471mm Hg, simulating the change in pressure from sea level to a cruising airliner. Prior to the hypobaric exposure, and at the conclusion of the two hours under hypobaric conditions, single view chest radiographs will be performed.

Enrollment

20 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Inpatient status on trauma surgery service
  2. An established diagnosis of pneumothorax with a traumatic etiology (patients with iatrogenic pneumothorax from attempted central venous line placement will be considered to have a traumatic etiology)
  3. Age ≥ 18 at the time of injury

Exclusion criteria

  1. Pregnancy
  2. Unable to give informed consent
  3. Pneumothorax which does not satisfactorily resolve after treatment with tube thoracostomy and requires operative intervention such as video assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS) or thoracotomy
  4. Pneumothorax requiring tube thoracostomy where the tube has been removed for < 4 or > 48 hours
  5. Head injury with GCS < 15 at time of evaluation for study
  6. Other injuries or conditions which would preclude participant's ability to remain in chamber for two hours
  7. NYHA class III or IV heart failure, active coronary artery disease, arrhythmias, pacemakers, implantable cardiac defibrillator, pulmonary hypertension, claustrophobia
  8. Severe obstructive or restrictive lung disease
  9. Chronic hypoxemia requiring supplemental oxygen
  10. Hypoxemia for any reason (pulmonary contusion, atelectasis, pneumonia, etc.) requiring > 3 liters supplemental oxygen at the time of entry into the study
  11. Inability to tolerate the confines of the chamber

Trial design

20 participants in 1 patient group

Traumatic Pneumothorax1
Description:
hypobaric chamber
Treatment:
Other: hypobaric chamber

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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