Status
Conditions
About
This study will measure nasopharyngeal pressure in neonates using a miniature high resolution catheter-tip pressure transducer. Any neonatal intensive care patient being treated with nasal respiratory support (e.g., nasal continuous positive airway pressure, nasal cannula flow either high (>1 LPM) or low (<1 LPM), and nasal prong ventilation either intermittent mandatory or high-frequency) will be eligible for study. The catheter-tip transducer will be placed within a standard gavage feeding tube catheter and introduced through the mouth into the posterior nasopharynx where continuous measurements will be made over 15 minutes. The 15 minute recording will be divided into 5 three minute segments, including a baseline recording at the ordered settings of pressure or flow, a recording at 1 level above baseline, a recording back at baseline, a recording 1 level below baseline, and a final segment back at baseline. The order of increase-decrease or decrease-increase from baseline will be by random sequence. Measurements may be repeated with any change in nasal gas flow or pressure ordered for patient care. These measurements will be used to correlate the ordered nasal respiratory support therapy with the actual upper airway pressure created by the therapy.
Full description
Non-invasive respiratory treatments are being used more frequently during neonatal intensive care. High-flow nasal cannula,1-2 nasal continuous positive airway pressure,3 nasal intermittent mandatory or synchronized ventilation,4 and high-frequency nasal continuous airway pressure5-6 are some of these modalities. These non-invasive therapies attempt to provide adequate oxygen delivery, positive end-expiratory pressure to maintain lung recruitment, and ventilation assistance without the need for endotracheal intubation. The benefits may be substantial, including decreased frequency of nosocomial infection, decreased risk for lung injury, and prevention of arrest in pulmonary development for those very preterm infants with immature lungs. However, there are very few reports of actual measurement of nasopharyngeal pressure during use of these non-invasive therapies.1,7 Combined, only 27 patients are included in two studies. Only one modality, high-flow nasal cannula, was evaluated. One study in 11 patients suggests a 2-3 cmH2O pressure drop exists between applied and delivered airway pressure.7 In order to better understand the relationship between applied and delivered airway pressures with all types of non-invasive therapy, we propose to measure nasopharyngeal pressure in neonates being treated with these modes of respiratory support.
If non-invasive respiratory support is initiated as part of routine pulmonary therapy for a neonate admitted to neonatal intensive care, the infant will be considered eligible for study if no exclusion criteria are met. Informed consent/parental permission will be requested and if obtained, the infant will be included for study.
The study procedure will be as follows:
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal