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The proposed study is to compare a modified DE technique, which is regularly used for low-risk patients by staff anesthesiologists at our institution, to a standard awake extubation. This modified deep extubation (mDE) occurs while the patient is still anaesthetized but at a lower dose of anaesthetic gas than previously described, and balanced with long acting opioids to attenuate the airway reaction. As previously stated, the literature shows that the risks of DE are equivalent to those of regular AE practice. Our hypothesis is that mDE will shorten the time from the end of the surgery (completion of last stitch) to the moment the patient is ready to leave the OR by at least 5 minutes when compared to standard AE practice.
Full description
Study type Randomized Controlled Trial comparing two extubation strategies for low-risk airway elective patients undergoing general anesthesia.
Population
Inclusion criteria ASA I-III patients, scheduled for laparoscopic surgery under general anesthesia.
Exclusion criteria
High-risk patients
Use of remifentanil during extubation
Requirement for prone position for surgical approach (i.e., spine surgery, anal fistulectomy, tumor resection of the back, etc)
Absolute indication for awake or deep extubation
Use of opioids in chronic pain patients
Procedures Patients that are potential candidates for the study will be selected according to inclusion and exclusion criteria when they undergo assessment on the Pre-Admission Unit (PAU). They will be selected from the PAU assessment list the day before the appointment by the research assistant. For both in person and phone interviews, the PAU personnel (nurse or anesthesiologist) will briefly introduce the patient to the study, and if the patient is interested in participating, the research assistant will approach them with detailed information and a hard-copy leaflet (or an email copy for a phone interview, if the patient agrees) regarding the study.
Informed consent to participate in the study will be taken by the research assistant on the day of surgery during the anesthesia assessment in the preoperative area. Patients will be randomized to either the AE or mDE group. Randomization will be performed in advance, using a computer-generated program and the participant assigned number. The patient and the research assistant will be blinded to the study group allocation. A study investigator, who will know the allocation of the patient, will assign the patient to the anesthesiologists that will provide the anesthesia and perform the extubation process according to group allocation. The anesthesiologists that are part of the research team will perform the extubation in the mDE group, and other attending anesthesiologists will perform their standard awake extubation in the AE group.
In the AE group, the attending anesthesiologist will perform the extubation according to the standard practice as follows:
In the mED group, the attending anaesthesiologist who is familiar with the mDE technique will use the following protocol:
During the patient care, the research assistant will record the events and times correlating to the primary and secondary outcomes by direct observation of the extubation process. The patient will also be interviewed by the research assistant in PACU regarding their experience with the recovery process once they are fully awake and ready to be transferred to the ward or discharged home. The patient will be blind to the allocation of the study group until the end of interview. If any problems occur during the extubation process, the patient will be debriefed by the attending anesthesiologist as regularly done in these cases regardless of study participation.
In case the patient was considered as a difficult intubation at the beginning of the case, or that the patient develops respiratory or hemodynamic instability, they would be excluded from the study and the extubation process will be carried out according to the attending anesthesiologist's clinical judgment.
Enrollment
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Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
High-risk patients:
Use of remifentanil during extubation
Requirement for prone position for surgical approach (i.e., spine surgery, anal fistulectomy, tumor resection of the back, etc)
Absolute indication for awake or deep extubation
Use of opioids in chronic pain patients
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
60 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
naveed siddiqui, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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