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Hypotensive Effect of Anaesthesia With TCI (HEAT)

U

Umeå University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Hypotension
Blood Pressure

Treatments

Other: Target Controlled Infusion
Other: Velocity Controlled Infusion

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02733406
TCI hypotension TIVA

Details and patient eligibility

About

Hypotension will often complicate induction of anaesthesia. The investigators want to test the hypothesis that Target Controlled Infusion, as opposed to Velocity Controlled Infusion, leads to less degree of hypotension.

Full description

Severe hypotension may be a serious complication to induction of anaesthesia. The patients preoperative clinical circulatory status will help define the risks of such a side-effect. A patient with a preexisting heart condition will be at increased risk for morbidity/mortality in relation to anaesthesia induction.

Total intravenous anaesthesia may be delivered by two different approaches. The old way where the drug (Propofol and/or Remifentanil) is delivered in a velocity (mg/kg x hour or microg/ kg x min) specified by the anaesthetist. Hereafter called Velocity Controlled Infusion (VCI). At induction, to get effect of the drug, a high infusion rate is desired. A high infusion rate is associated with increased risks of hypotension if it is not adjusted in accordance with the current circulatory status of the patient. A failure to adjust may be futile for the patient. Therefore, induction takes some time because infusion rate is set within a relatively safe range. After a few minutes, once airway control is achieved, the infusion rate must be adjusted down to avoid hypotension.

There is a more modern way of adjusting the infusion rate, the so called Target Controlled Infusion. With this approach, the pump delivering the drug will help the anaesthetist to select the appropriate infusion rate for any given situation. The anaesthetist selects a preferred concentration of the drug at the target, that is in the circulation. The pump then administrates the drug, first at high rate and then at lower rate, taking into account the patients age, weight and sex and the preferred target concentration.

It is possible that this help from the machine is associated with less risk for hypotension at anaesthesia induction. If this is so it would have an impact on which of TCI and VCI that would be the best choice of anaesthesia. This would have special impact when giving anaesthesia to patients with a heart condition.

Enrollment

76 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

* All patients scheduled for anaesthesia at Östersunds Hospital

  • ASA class I-II

Exclusion criteria

  • On beforehand decision to start continous delivery of blood pressure increasing drug at induction.
  • Any contraindication to Total Intravenous Anaesthesia

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

76 participants in 2 patient groups

Target Controlled Infusion
Other group
Description:
This group of patients will have their anaesthesia induced with Target Controlled Infusion (TCI)
Treatment:
Other: Target Controlled Infusion
Velocity Controlled Infusion
Other group
Description:
This group of patients will have their anaesthesia induced with Velocity Controlled Infusion (VCI)
Treatment:
Other: Velocity Controlled Infusion

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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