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The goal of this RCT is to demonstrate that, in neonatal anesthesia, the use of Lung Ultrasound (LUS) to guide choice of best Positive End-Expiratory Pressure (Peep) - the one that efficiently avoids lung atelectasis - leads to better gas exchange in the lung thus can lead to reduction of FiO2 applied to ventilatory setting in order to achieve same peripheral saturations of oxygen (SpO2).
Specific aims of the study are:
Full description
The investigators plan to perform a single-center randomised, controlled trial, in compliance with the Helsinki Declaration and local regulatory agreements. Patients of age under two months scheduled for general anesthesia due to elective or urgent surgery will be eligible for enrolment. Eligible cases will be treated by only two experienced anesthesiologists (with more than 10-year experience in pediatric field) who underwent a formal LUS training, in order to reduce operator-dependency of the results. Parental consent to the study will be obtained before entering operatory room.
Both groups will be preliminarily scanned with LUS in the posterior areas before induction of anesthesia, upon entrance into the operatory theatre. Posterior areas of the chest will be defined as the area between the posterior axillary line and the spine, not including the scapular area. This will be further categorized into Upper and Lower as divided by an imaginary line passing through the nipples so that 4 posterior areas are identified: Right Upper Zone, Right Lower Zone, Left Upper Zone, Left Lower zone. For every zone, presence of multiple B lines and subpleural consolidations will be noted. The same ultrasound machine will be used for all cases.
In both groups a standard tidal volume of 6 ml/kg and a standard respiratory rate of 30/min will be applied after anesthesia induction and endotracheal intubation.
Patients will be randomised through the Stata software randomizer just before entering operatory room into one of the 2 following groups:
Intervention group: after induction of anesthesia and intubation, patients will be briefly turned onto their side and LUS will be performed in the posterior areas of the lung; PEEP will be adjusted in increments of 1 cmH20/minute starting from zero while maintaining visual inspection of LUS up to the point where signs of eventual subpleural consolidations and/or multiple B lines are not present anymore.
Control group: after induction, patients will be similarly scanned with LUS on their side but PEEP will be set at 4 cmH2O independently from results of LUS.
FiO2 will be chosen as the minimum necessary to maintain SpO2 of 97-98% in both groups.
Demographic and surgical data will be collected for both groups. Intraoperatively patients will be monitored with standard monitoring systems (SpO2, Heart Rate, Blood Pressure, diuresis, temperature), plus NIRS (Near-Infrared-Spectroscopy); these data will be recorded every 5 minutes. Ventilator settings will also be recorded every 5 minutes. Changes in PEEP or FiO2 needed according to clinical data or need for recruitment manoeuvres will be noted with relative time of occurrence. Major intraoperative complications such as desaturation <90%, hypotension < 5th percentile for age, bradycardia<80 bpm, will be noted. Static compliance will be measured after final PEEP is applied and recorded. Postoperatively, occurrence of PPC in the first 24 hours will be recorded.
Blinding: the anesthesiologist in charge of the case won't be blinded to the group as he/she is the person who will perform LUS and set PEEP and FiO2 for the case. After surgery, the personnel in the ward or ICU, will be blinded to the arm of the study and will record postoperative pulmonary complications. Parents of patients will be blinded too.
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280 participants in 2 patient groups
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Anna Camporesi, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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