ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

The Effect of Arterial Carbon Dioxide Levels on Cerebral Blood Flow and Cerebral Autoregulation in the Steep Trendelenburg Position During Robot-assisted Prostatectomy, and Its Effect on Postoperative Cognition (TILTDOWN-3)

U

University Hospital, Akershus

Status

Invitation-only

Conditions

Cognitive Function
Intracranial Pressure
Cerebral Perfusion Pressure
Circulation System

Treatments

Other: Ventilation strategy

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06865027
REK:744921
2022088 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Patients scheduled for robot-assisted prostatectomy will be randomized to either high or low concentrations of carbon dioxide in the blood. This will be managed by applying different ventilation strategies during anesthesia.The levels will be distinctly different.

The investigators will assess whether different concentrations of carbon dioxide in blood results in different brain blood flow levels and different intracranial pressure during laparascopic surgery in the head-down tilted position. The investigators also will assess if different carbon dioxide level will manifest in different cognitive abilities in the two study groups, measured on day 1 post-surgery.

Full description

Detailed Description: The carotid artery carries blood into the brain. Therefore, blood flow levels in the carotid artery may be used to assess brain perfusion. Brain perfusion is carefully regulated by the body, to ensure that the brain always receives enough oxygen and nutrients. During prostate surgery using laparoscopic techniques, the patient lies tilted on the operating table, with their head markedly lower than their legs. The investigators aim to study the effect on cerebral blood flow of a head-down tilted body position in combination with anesthesia and laparoscopic surgery, and particularly how cerebral blood flow is influenced by the participants' breathing pattern. The study aims to achieve insights that may be used to improve the treatment of vulnerable surgical patients, such as those with cerebrovascular disease or severe heart disease.

Anesthesia and surgery will proceed as usual, with the exception that the respiratory support the participants receive during the surgery will be adjusted as described below. The participants will receive standard monitoring of heart rate, blood pressure, and blood oxygen levels. Before surgery, the anesthesia team will per routine insert two plastic cannulas into the left arm for administering medication, and a plastic cannula into the participant's left wrist for close monitoring of the participant's blood pressure.

Study participants will undergo four additional steps:

  1. Before surgery, an anesthesiologist will insert a thin plastic cannula into a superficial vein on the side of the neck. The cannula is the same type as the ones used on the arm and has a diameter of 1.1 mm. The purpose of this cannula is to measure the pressure of the blood returning from the brain to the heart. The procedure involves brief, moderate pain associated with the needle insertion. The plastic cannula will be removed before the participant wakes up from anesthesia.
  2. Just before and during surgery, a trained anesthesiologist will perform ultrasound measurements on the right side of the participant's neck, temple, and the outside of the eyelid. Each measurement lasts 4-5 minutes. This will not prolong the time spent in the operating room. The measurements will cause no discomfort.
  3. All patients undergoing prostate removal with robotic surgery receive respiratory support with a ventilator during anesthesia. In this study, the investigators will adjust the ventilator to control the carbon dioxide (CO2) levels towards either the lower or upper normal range for CO2. A blinded randomization will determine the group assignment. Regardless of which group a participant is assigned to, their CO2 level will be maintained within a range routinely used during anesthesia and considered completely safe.

In the project, the investigators will collect and record participant information. The investigators will store recordings of the participants' pulse, blood pressure, breathing depth and rhythm, levels of oxygen and CO2 in the participants' blood, medication doses used during surgery, and results of blood tests taken during surgery. From the participants' medical records, the investigators will retrieve and record the participants' age, gender, height, weight, whether the participants have chronic diseases, and which regular medications the participants use.

Cognitive tests of reaction time and problem-solving abilities will be administered a few days before and one day after surgery.

Receiving information about an illness, undergoing a surgical procedure, receiving general anesthesia, peroperative CO2 levels, body position during robotic surgery, and postoperative pain medication all affect the body physically and may trigger stress and anxiety. The investigators want to assess this impact using a well-established method that tests reaction time through five exercises on an iPad. The method has been developed for use in patients. Those participating in the study will be asked to perform this test at the outpatient clinic a few days before surgery and one day after surgery.

Enrollment

46 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

55 to 80 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion Criteria: Males 55-80 years old, accepted by surgeon and attending anesthesiologist for RALP surgery.

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Poorly controlled hypertension (resting BP >165/90 on pre-study consult).
  • Emphysema of the lung.
  • Previous spontaneous pneumothorax.
  • Cerebrovascular disease. Including but not limited to previous SAH, EDH, SDH, hemorrhage from AVM, known AVM and stenosis in carotid or cerebral arteries.
  • Intracranial malignancy or metastases from primary cancer.
  • Significant cardiovascular disease (NYHA class III or IV).
  • Renal failure grade 4 or 5 (estimated GFR <30).
  • Anatomical hinders for performing ultrasound of the right carotid artery or middle cerebral artery.
  • Primary language other than Scandinavian.
  • Diagnosed dementia of any subtype.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Triple Blind

46 participants in 2 patient groups

Hypercapnia
Other group
Description:
PaCO2: 6.4-7.0 kPa
Treatment:
Other: Ventilation strategy
Normocapnia
Other group
Description:
PaCO2: 5.0-5.5 kPa
Treatment:
Other: Ventilation strategy

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems