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Inhalative Sedation in ICU With Sevoflurane Via Anaesthetic Conserving Device Compared to Propofol

K

Klinikum Ludwigshafen

Status

Completed

Conditions

Recovery From Sedation
Renal Function
Sevoflurane Consumption
Cardioprotection
Hepatic Function

Treatments

Drug: Sevoflurane
Drug: Propofol

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT00586118
ANA06104

Details and patient eligibility

About

The evaluation of the presented study will work on the practicability of inhalative sedation on the ICU, potential benefits and limitations of the ACD system in a postoperative sedated patient population in comparison to a standard intravenous sedation regimen with propofol, and focus on renal and hepatic function, cardioprotection and pharmacoeconomics

Full description

A goal-oriented sedation complies the ability to sedate the patient as deeply as necessary, and allow a modern ventilation regimen with early spontaneous breathing and a pain-free cooperative patient. The ideal sedative agent - with a short duration of action, predictable wake-up times, low drug toxicity, haemodynamic stability and less side effects, and a rational pharmacoeconomic impact nowadays - has still to be found. Inhalative anaesthetics show these properties, but until the introduction of AnaConDa© (Anesthetic Conserving Device, ACD) in 2005, the use of volatile anaesthetics on the intensive care unit (ICU) required specific evaporating devices or scavenging systems. The ACD, a modified heat- moisture filter, is connected to the breathing circuit of conventional ICU ventilators and a syringe pump delivers the volatile anaesthetic to the ACD where it is vaporized through a rod. Most of the exhaled gas is absorbed in a charcoal filter's membrane and reflected to the patient in the following inspiration. Randomised, controlled and comparative studies to the use of volatile anaesthetics in ICU via this innovative device are still missing. Isoflurane has been studied in small patient populations and in comparison to midazolam, while Sevoflurane - a newer volatile agent with short action, brief elimination time, and low hepatic biodegradation - has only been studied intraoperatively and in short-term sedation. This is the first prospective, randomised, clinical study on the feasibility of sevoflurane via the ACD for sedation in ICU patients until 72 hours in comparison to a standard intravenous sedation with propofol. The investigation will work on potential benefits and limitations of the use of volatile agents on the ICU, the quality of sedation (Richmond Agitation Sedation Scale, BIS), infusion rate stability of sevoflurane and respiratory parameters, short-term recovery (time from discontinuation of infusion until following verbal commands and extubation), haemodynamics, renal and hepatic function and adverse side effects.

Enrollment

120 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18-80 years
  • elective operative procedure, and indication for admission to the ICU for postoperative sedation
  • ASA I-III
  • weight 50-120 kg
  • Haemoglobin > 10 g/dl
  • ability and acceptance to agree to the study participation

Exclusion criteria

  • malignant hyperthermia
  • muscle diseases or weakness
  • liver insufficiency (ASAT, ALAT > 40 U/min)
  • pancreas insufficiency
  • emergencies
  • women in child bearing age and missing negative pregnancy test, pregnancy or lactation
  • diseases from the central nervous system (such as M. Parkinson and multiple sclerosis)
  • increased intracranial pressure, head trauma
  • pre-existing delirium, agitation and psychiatric derangements
  • alcohol and drug abuse (including opioid abuse)
  • allergy to any of the study agents
  • refusal from the patient to participate in the study
  • participation in another study project.

Trial design

120 participants in 2 patient groups

1-Sevo
Description:
Sevoflurane/ACD group (n=60)
Treatment:
Drug: Sevoflurane
2-Propofol
Description:
Propofol group (n=60)
Treatment:
Drug: Propofol

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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