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Predictive Model in EEG for Induction and Emergence in Pediatric With Propofol (EEGPED)

V

Victor Contreras, MSN

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Electroencephalography
Children, Only
Anesthesia

Treatments

Drug: Propofol
Device: Electroencephalography

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03705338
180629004

Details and patient eligibility

About

Anesthesia is essential to control pain and produce unconsciousness during surgery and other procedures during childhood. The anesthetic deepness is measured indirectly through changes in blood pressure and heart rate or can be inferred according to estimated or measured concentrations of anesthetics.

In adults, anesthetic dosing, using patterns based on electroencephalogram (EEG) analysis, has shown clinical advantages compared to traditional monitoring. These advantages include lower consumption of hypnotics, less post-operative cognitive deterioration and decreased intraoperative awakening.

The maturation of the brain and Central Nervous System (CNS) that occurs in childhood affects the response of anesthetics. Additionally, the EEG changes with age and its dominant frequency is lower in children. This explains why brain monitoring methods developed in adults do not work well in children. However, these patterns cannot be extrapolated to the pediatric population. Therefore, it is necessary to develop indexes based on EEG with pediatric data to improve the dosage of hypnotics in this population.

The appearance of alpha wave in frontal EEG has been successfully used as a marker of unconsciousness during general anesthesia with GABAergic hypnotics in adults (sevoflurane, propofol). However, in children, the alpha wave appears since 4 months of age in anesthetics with sevoflurane, so studying the characterization of this wave during the loss and recovery of secondary consciousness anesthetic agents such as propofol has not been studied yet.

Full description

Research question:

Is it possible to use the alpha wave as an indicator of loss and recovery of consciousness in anesthesia with propofol in children?

Hypothesis:

The appearance and disappearance of frontal alpha wave is a good indicator of loss and recovery of consciousness in anesthesia with propofol in children.

Enrollment

1 patient

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 11 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • ASA I - II
  • Indications of phimosis surgery, cryptorchid and/or inguinal hernia surgery

Exclusion criteria

  • Anatomical limitations for installing the EEG cap.
  • Congenital or genetic malformations that influence his/her brain development.
  • Neurological or cardiovascular disease
  • Use of drugs with effect in the CNS in the last 24 hrs.
  • Preterm newborn less than 32 weeks.

Trial design

1 participants in 1 patient group

Electroencephalography
Description:
Electroencephalography (EEG) for induction and emergence in pediatric patients under general anesthesia with propofol.
Treatment:
Device: Electroencephalography
Drug: Propofol

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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