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Perioperative respiratory complications are a major source of morbidity and mortality. Postoperative atelectasis plays a central role in their development. Protective "open lung" mechanical ventilation aims to minimize the occurrence of atelectasis during the perioperative period. Randomized controlled studies have been performed comparing various "open lung" ventilation protocols, but these studies report varying and conflicting effects. The interpretation of these studies is complicated by the absence of imagery supporting the pulmonary impact associated with the use of different ventilation strategies. Imaging studies suggest that the gain in pulmonary gas content in "open lung" ventilation regimens disappears within minutes after the extubation. Thus, the potential benefits of open-lung ventilation appear to be lost if, at the time of extubation, no measures are used to keep the lungs well aerated. Recent expert recommendations on good mechanical ventilation practices in the operating room conclude that there is actually no quality study on extubation.
Extubation is a very common practice for anesthesiologists as part of their daily clinical practice. It is therefore imperative to generate evidence on good clinical practice during anesthetic emergence in order to potentially identify an effective extubation strategy to reduce postoperative pulmonary complications.
Full description
The aim of this study is to establish the feasibility of a multicenter randomized controlled clinical trial comparing two clinical strategies called "open lung" and "conventional" during extubation. The investigators also aim to estimate the rates of postoperative pulmonary complications in the two intervention groups and verify the hypothesis that the "open lung" extubation strategy improves postoperative lung aeration as measured by the quantitative Lung Ultrasound Score compared to a conventional extubation strategy.
Methods
A pilot, prospective, randomized and controlled triple-blind study. Sixty-nine patients scheduled to undergo elective surgery at the CHUM and at moderate or high risk of postoperative pulmonary complications according to the ARISCAT score will be recruited. Following the administration of standardized mechanical ventilation and after obtaining consent, participants will be randomly assigned to two groups: Intervention group, "open lung" extubation strategy and Control group, "conventional" extubation strategy.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Expected or known difficult intubation according to the treating anesthesiologist
Postoperative mechanical ventilation (planned or unplanned)
Neuromuscular disease
Intrathoracic surgery
Respiratory failure, sepsis or mechanical ventilation in the month preceding anesthesia
Pregnancy
Patient refusal
Ultrasound sub-study:
Clinician's refusal to participate
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
69 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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