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Conscious Sedation clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06181188 Completed - Clinical trials for Patient Satisfaction

Use of Ketamine for Conscious Sedation in Flexible Bronchoscopy

Start date: July 15, 2019
Phase: Phase 4
Study type: Interventional

In this study, the investigators plan to conduct a single blinded randomized controlled trial in the Pulmonary Service to demonstrate the efficacy of ketamine and its utility in moderate sedation. Patients presenting for bronchoscopy who meet inclusion criteria will be approached, and if amenable, will be consented and enrolled. Patients will be randomized to receive either 1 mg of midazolam and ketamine 0.25 to 0.5 mg/kg loading dose with subsequent doses of 10-20 mg IV or standard fentanyl and midazolam in 25mcg and 1mg increments respectively for moderate sedation during their procedure. The primary outcome will be patient satisfaction, which will be measured a using patient clinical satisfaction form. A number of secondary outcomes will include the following: (1) provider satisfaction (2) the time from sedation administration to procedure start (when the scope is inserted), (3) the time from sedation to scope removal from the trachea (4) the time from sedation to discharge (defined as the time from the end of the procedure until the patient meets discharge criteria from the recovery area), (5) total dose of medications given (including midazolam, fentanyl, and ketamine), (6) adverse events, (7) vital signs, (8) and the need for additional medications, in particular reversal agents.

NCT ID: NCT05244538 Completed - Conscious Sedation Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of Hypnosis Via Virtual Reality During Oocyte Retrieval

Start date: February 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study compares hypnosis via virtual reality to sedation with commonly used intravenous anesthetic agents (propofol and remifentanil) during oocyte retrieval. The main objective of this prospective randomized controlled study will be a reduction of 50 percent of the doses of remifentanil and propofol administered during oocyte retrieval while maintaining satisfaction with the quality of care.

NCT ID: NCT05082896 Completed - General Anesthesia Clinical Trials

Multicentre ObseRvational Study in Posterior mecHanical thrombEctomy: conscioUs Sedation vs General aneSthesia

Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The association of conscious sedation vs. general anesthesia in ischemic stroke with posterior circulation occlusions undergoing endovascular therapy, is istill unknown. No prospective or clinical trials have studied this effect on posterior circulation strokes. The choice of anesthetic regimen is ussually depending on local stroke-team protocols or neurointerventional preference. MORPHEUS Stroke Registry is a prospective multicentre observational study that investigates the association between anestheisa and functional outcome in patients with posterior circulation large vessel occlusion treated endovascularly.

NCT ID: NCT05068700 Completed - Nursing Clinical Trials

Integrated Pulmonary Index for Nurse-administered Procedural Sedation

Start date: April 22, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Implementing capnography into practice for respiratory monitoring during sedation is considered a high priority by leading authorities in Canada and internationally. The Canadian Anesthesiologists' Society's position statement recommends that capnography should be available wherever moderate or deep sedation is used. The Academy of Medical Royal Colleges (UK) Standard and Guidance report on Safe Sedation Practice for Healthcare Procedures noted that while capnography is not a mandated practice, providers should consider implementing capnography as a long term goal. These recommendations are in place because sedated patients who are not monitored with capnography have frequent undetected, and therefore untreated, respiratory depression. Of note, though, these guidelines do not provide specific recommendations for how capnography should be implemented for nurse-administered sedation. The aim of this study is to determine if smart alarm guided treatment of respiratory depression using the Integrated Pulmonary Index is an effective way to implement capnography during nurse-administered sedation. The primary outcome is the number of seconds in an alert condition state without an intervention being applied. The IPI is intended to reduce the cognitive burden of synthesizing multiple sources of physiological monitoring input and hence lowering the threshold for triggering intervention by clinicians to support respiration. The primary outcome directly measures this concept by quantifying the time taken for an alert to trigger an intervention. Higher values of the primary outcome will result from either a problem state that should have triggered an intervention but did not, or an 'inappropriate' alert (i.e. an alert that was not important enough to warrant immediate intervention.)

NCT ID: NCT04815109 Completed - Clinical trials for Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

Prospective Electroencephalography Evaluation of Sedation in COVID-19

Start date: April 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sedation of severe COVID-19 disease are often complicated. We try to find a correlate for this observation by encephalographic studies.

NCT ID: NCT04807101 Completed - Anesthesia Clinical Trials

Sedation Regimens in GI Endoscopy

Start date: April 5, 2021
Phase: Early Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

This is a noninferiority study designed to examine whether conscious sedation with midazolam alone results in efficacy and safety that is not inferior to the combination of midazolam and fentanyl. English-speaking patients ≥18 years old and ≤75 years old presenting for GI endoscopy planned with conscious sedation using midazolam and fentanyl, will be randomized 1:1 to single agent sedation with midazolam or combination sedation with midazolam and fentanyl. Participants will be blinded to the choice of sedation. Sedation quality and adverse events will be measured with a validated patient-centered measure of procedural sedation quality, the PROcedural Sedation Assessment Survey (PROSAS) [Leffler, et al. Gastrointest Endosc. 2015;81(1):194-203]. Endoscopic quality measures in the 2 study groups will be collected by retrospective chart review, as an additional metric to ensure the quality of the procedure is not compromised by the choice of sedation.

NCT ID: NCT04621526 Completed - Conscious Sedation Clinical Trials

Monitored Anesthesia Care: Dexmedetomidine-Ketamine Versus Dexmedetomidine- Propofol For Chronic Subdural Hematoma

Start date: November 10, 2020
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Inadequate sedation and analgesia indicated by intraoperative movements are markers of inadequate MAC during burr-hole surgery for chronic subdural hematoma evacuation especially when general anesthesia poses high risk for the patients. Dexmedetomidine, ketamine, propofol intravenous infusion and other agents was used to provide monitored anesthesia care with variable success if used as solitary agents as each drug has its limited use.

NCT ID: NCT04172415 Enrolling by invitation - Conscious Sedation Clinical Trials

Current Procedural Sedation Practices in a Canadian Community Emergency Department

Start date: November 30, 2019
Phase:
Study type: Observational

To review current Emergency Department procedural sedation practices in the community hospital setting and the associated drugs used (class of anesthetic and mode of administration). The ultimate goal of this investigation is to determine the need for a new analgesic/anesthesia drug and to compare the outcomes of a new drug within the same community Emergency Department setting. In particular, this may present a future opportunity to evaluate Penthrox (methoxyflurane) as a viable alternative for procedural sedation and analgesia in Canadian Emergency Departments.

NCT ID: NCT03933280 Completed - Conscious Sedation Clinical Trials

Conscious Sedation for Cataract Operations Under Topical Anaesthesia

Start date: July 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Topical anaesthesia of the eye for ophthalmologic procedures avoids pain and discomfort of local anaesthetic injection in the peribulbar or retrobulbar block so that patient comfortability is achieved. Sedation during topical anaesthesia of the eye is mostly required to achieve anxiolysis, amnesia and keeping the patient calm all through the procedure. In the present study, the investigators will investigate the effect of nalbuphine/dexmedetomidine versus nalbuphine/propofol on the sedation as a primary outcome, intra-operative, postoperative analgesia, vital signs, patient and surgeon satisfaction and side effects as secondary outcomes

NCT ID: NCT03925779 Completed - Conscious Sedation Clinical Trials

Conscious Sedation for Outpatient Colonoscopy

Start date: June 15, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Although colonoscopy is a mildly painful procedure, the pain and the procedure itself are distressful for most patients. This raises the attention for using different sedation regimens aiming at maintaining optimal sedation level with maintained airway and stable haemodynamics all through the procedure. The present study was scheduled to investigate the sedative efficacy of dexmedetomedine versus propofol-remifentanil for outpatient colonoscopy.