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Study of Variations of Pleural and Esophageal Pressures Under Mechanical Ventilation After Lung Transplantation

P

Public Assistance-Hospitals of Marseille (AP-HM)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Respiratory Disease

Treatments

Other: Measurement of oesophageal pressure and pleural pressure

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03179644
2016-08

Details and patient eligibility

About

The primary objective of the study is to determine the correlation between mean pleural pressure and oesophageal pressure in the immediate aftermath of bi-pulmonary transplantation.

In this research, oesophageal pressure will be measured by a nasogastric tube with an esophageal balloon (also suitable for feeding the patient) usually installed at the time of transplantation, pleural pressure will be measured by several Pleurocath-type catheters (Prodimed Inc, France) which the thoracic surgeon will have positioned at the end of the surgery without additional skin intrusion.

Full description

Pulmonary transplantation is a model of acute lung injury due to ischemia-reperfusion phenomena responsible in 1 in 4 patients for the occurrence of primary graft dysfunction (DPG), which penalizes graft prognosis in the short to medium term. The survival of transplant patients. Furthermore, the post-operative period is a complex period in which multiple hemorrhagic, immunological, infectious, and neuromuscular complications may arise that may require prolonged mechanical ventilation. At present, there are no data on the measurement of pressure in pleural space after pulmonary transplantation. Achieving this measurement would make it possible to adapt the settings of the ventilator to both the acute phase in the case of DPG and to a later phase in case of mechanical weaning. In the case of bi-pulmonary transplantation, before the thorax is closed, each patient benefits from the systematic placement of bilateral anterior and posterior thoracic drains to prevent the formation of fluid effusions (hemothorax, pleurisy) and / or gases (pneumothorax ) Which would impede ventilation and compromise gas exchange. These drains are gradually withdrawn during resuscitation usually after weaning mechanical ventilation

Enrollment

14 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Adult patient admitted in the Respiratory Distress and Severe Infections Intensive Care Unit in the postoperative period following a double lung transplant after written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age less than 18 years, Pregnancy, breast feeding, adults under guardianship or under safeguard justice, not beneficiaries of a social security scheme, persons deprived of liberty by a judicial or administrative decision , those hospitalized without consent Single lung transplant
  • Open chest at the end of transplantation
  • high flow pleura-pulmonary fistula (Contraindication to the establishment of a nasogastric tube proven presence of esophageal varices esophageal tumor Surgery of the esophagus of less than 1 year

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

14 participants in 1 patient group

Bi-pulmonary transplantation
Experimental group
Description:
Adult patient admitted in the Respiratory Distress and Severe Infections Intensive Care Unit in the postoperative period following a double lung transplant after written informed consent.
Treatment:
Other: Measurement of oesophageal pressure and pleural pressure

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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