Elective Open Thoracotomy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Target-Controlled Infusion of Remifentanil Without Muscle Relaxant Allows Acceptable Surgical Conditions During Thoracotomy
Verified date | September 2014 |
Source | Dammam University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | Saudi Arabia: Ministry of Higher Education |
Study type | Interventional |
Although the administration of muscle relaxation is essential standard of care for thoracic
procedures, it could cause long-reversal times and postoperative residual curarization
(PORC) increasing length of post-anesthesia care unit (PACU) stay and hospital costs.
Sugammadex offers new perspectives to reduce the incidence of PORC. Unfortunately it is not
available in many countries because of its significantly high cost. We hypothesized that the
use of target-controlled remifentanil infusion (TCI) with the non-muscle relaxant (NMR)
would be associated with comparable surgical conditions and reduced total costs compared
with the use of neuromuscular blockers during thoracotomy.
After ethical approval, 66 patients scheduled for elective thoracotomy under sevoflurane
anesthesia with TCI remifentanil will be included in this prospective, randomized,
single-blind, controlled study.
Patients will be randomly assigned to receive cisatracurium or saline (n = 33 for each
group) throughout the procedure. Laryngoscopy and intubating conditions, intraoperative
modified thoracic surgery rating scale (Table below), incidence of light anesthesia, and use
of vasopressors and anesthetics, clinical recovery, incidence of PORC, PACU and hospital
stays, and total costs will be recorded.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 66 |
Est. completion date | March 2014 |
Est. primary completion date | February 2014 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | Both |
Age group | 18 Years to 70 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - American Society of Anesthesiologists physical class (II-III) - elective open thoracotomy Exclusion Criteria: - New York Heart Association class> II) - Forced vital capacity < 50% of the predicted values - Forced expiratory volume in 1 second < 50% of the predicted values - Hepatic diseases - Renal diseases. - Reactive airways. - Neuromuscular diseases. - Asthma - Pregnancy - Increased risk of regurgitation - Anticipated difficult intubation - Body mass index >35 kg/m2 - Electrolytes abnormalities - Acid base abnormalities - Repeat surgery - history of head and neck surgery - Preoperative circulatory support - Preoperative ventilatory support - Medications affecting the neuromuscular junctions - Family history of malignant hyperthermia - Allergy to any of the study drugs |
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Saudi Arabia | Dammam University | Al Khubar | Eastern |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Dammam University |
Saudi Arabia,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Modified surgical rating scale | A four-point ordinal scale adopted from the surgical rating scale of Martini et al.,ranging from 1 (extremely poor conditions) to 4 (optimal conditions). Extremely poor (Score 1) indicates that the surgeon is unable to work because of coughing, bucking, diaphragmatic contractions or movements, or the inability to spread or approximate the ribs during chest opening and closure, respectively, because of inadequate muscle relaxation; poor (Score 2) indicates that there is a visible field, but the surgeon is severely hampered by continuous muscle contractions, spontaneous movements of the surgical lung, or both that could cause hazard of tissue damage; good (Score 3) indicates that there is an acceptable field with sporadic muscle contractions causing some interference with the surgeon's work; excellent (Score 4) indicates a wide working field without any lung movement or muscle contractions. |
for 3 hours after start of surgery | Yes |
Secondary | heart rate | heart rate | 5 min after induction of anesthesia, 1 min after chest opening, 30 min after start of surgery, 60 min after start of surgery, 90 min after start of surgery, 120 min after start of surgery, 1 min after start of chest closure, 5 min after extubation | Yes |
Secondary | Mean blood pressure | Mean blood pressure | 5 min after induction of anesthesia, 1 min after chest opening, 30 min after start of surgery, 60 min after start of surgery, 90 min after start of surgery, 120 min after start of surgery, 1 min after start of chest closure, 5 min after extubation | Yes |
Secondary | Train-of-four ratio | Train-of-four ratio | 5 min after induction of anesthesia, 1 min after chest opening, 30 min after start of surgery, 60 min after start of surgery, 90 min after start of surgery, 120 min after start of surgery, 1 min after start of chest closure, 5 min after extubation | No |
Secondary | laryngoscopy conditions | laryngoscopy conditions | 1 min after laryngscopy | No |
Secondary | intubating conditions | intubating conditions | 1 min after intubation | Yes |
Secondary | Cost of medications | cost of the used medications | after surgery | No |
Secondary | Need for vasoactive drugs | use of ephedrine, and norepinephrine | for 3 hour during surgery | Yes |
Secondary | Recovery Times | the times to spontaneous eye opening, obey verbal command, tracheal extubation and post-anesthesia care unit discharge | for 1 hours after surgery | Yes |