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Isocapnic Hyperventilation - an Alternative Method

S

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Status

Completed

Conditions

Oropharyngeal Neoplasms

Treatments

Device: Isocapnic hyperventilation

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03074110
GLS-588681

Details and patient eligibility

About

Isocapnic hyperventilation (IHV) is a method that shortens time to extubation after inhalation anaesthesia by increasing airway carbon dioxide (CO2) during hyperventilation (HV). In two experimental studies (mechanical lung model and porcine model) and in a pilot study on patients undergoing sevoflurane anaesthesia for major ear-nose-throat (ENT) surgery, the investigators evaluated the feasibility of an alternative technique of IHV. By performing a prospective, randomised controlled study, the investigators want to further test this alternative method for IHV.

Full description

Isocapnic hyperventilation (IHV) provides an alternative method for weaning from inhalation anaesthesia which decreases the time to eye-opening, extubation and time spent in the PACU. The method is well known since at least 40-50 years and involves the maintenance of a stable CO2 level during hyperventilation, which increases the elimination of anaesthetic gas without producing hypocapnia. Studies have declared that the reduction in time to eye-opening is 50-60 % compared to a standard weaning procedure after inhalation anaesthesia.

There are several principally different ways to maintain the CO2 level during hyperventilation, where a number of technical solutions that add dead-space to the anaesthesia circuit and thereby produce rebreathing of CO2 during hyperventilation are the most studied methods so far. However, the original method of directly adding CO2 to the breathing circuit during hyperventilation could be considered in need of a re-evaluation, as modern anaesthesia delivery units and monitoring equipment to a great extent can eliminate the risk of hypercapnia, that was described with this procedure in the 1980ies.

An alternative IHV method is to directly infuse CO2 to the inspiratory limb of the breathing circuit through a mixing box while using mechanical hyperventilation by a standardised protocol. This technique was recently evaluated by the investigators, in a bench test, and in an in vivo model. Based on these studies, the CO2 dosage needed to achieve isocapnia during HV at various levels of alveolar ventilation, CO2 production and dead space was estimated and a gender- and weight-based nomogram for CO2 delivery during IHV was constructed. Furthermore, the investigators could show, in vivo, that the washout time of sevoflurane anaesthesia was one-third compared to normal ventilation. The feasibility of this IHV method was evaluated in a pilot study in humans, based on the results of our two previous experimental studies. To finalize the project the investigators now conduct a prospective randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of the method, compared to a standard weaning procedure, after long-term sevoflurane anaesthesia.

Enrollment

31 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult patients scheduled for major elective ear-nose-throat (ENT) surgery after informed consent was obtained during the pre-operative evaluation.

Exclusion criteria

  • Patients with severe pulmonary or circulatory disease

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Sequential Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

31 participants in 2 patient groups

Isocapnic hyperventilation
Active Comparator group
Description:
After end of surgery, hyperventilation and administration of a small, precalculated amount of CO2 into the breathing circuit will be performed.
Treatment:
Device: Isocapnic hyperventilation
Standard procedure
No Intervention group
Description:
After end of surgery, patients will be subdued to a standard weaning procedure.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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