Endoscopic Sinus Surgery Clinical Trial
Official title:
Controlled Hypotension During Endoscopic Sinus Surgery: A Comparison of Propofol and Magnesium Sulfate
Endoscopic Sinus surgery usually associated by bleeding, despite using of local vasopressor
injection, head up position- controlled hypotension is generally used for control of this
purpose.
Propofol has been reported as a good agent for controlled hypotension by decreasing systemic
vascular resistance secondary to arterial and venous vasodilation and a decrease in
myocardial contractility with a dose-dependent property.
Magnesium Sulfate also has been reported as an agent of hypotensive anaesthesia by inhibition
of the release of norepinephrine by blocking N-type calcium channel at the nerve ending
beside acting as a vasodilator.
The well known pharmacodynamic effects of the intravenous infusion of propofol or Magnesium
Sulfate may prove the advantage of this group in controlling intraoperative blood pressure
thus reducing surgical field bleeding.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | February 2020 |
Est. primary completion date | January 2020 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 45 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - American Society of Anesthesiologists Physical Classes I or II Exclusion Criteria: - Patients refusal - Patients with hypersensitivity for any drug used in the study including magnesium, propofol or isoflurane - Patients receiving magnesium sulfate supplementation - Patients receiving drugs known to have significant interaction. - Patients with ischemic heart disease - Patients with heart defects - Patients with significant heart failure - Patients with increased intracranial pressure. - Patients with systemic hypertension |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Egypt | Nabil A Abd El-Mageed | Mansoura | DK |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Mansoura University |
Egypt,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) | automatically non invasive measured every 3 minutes , recorded every 15 minutes till the end and 15 minutes after extubation the end and 15 minutes after extubation | 15 minutes after the induction of the hypotensive agent | |
Secondary | The blood loss | The blood loss would be calculated using the following formula Blood Loss = Blood Volume. In )Hct 1 / Hct2) | at the end of the surgery | |
Secondary | The number of patients will need nitroglycerine and dose | The number of patients will need nitroglycerine | at the end of the surgery | |
Secondary | Use of Ephedrine | The number of patients will need ephedrine | at the end of the surgery | |
Secondary | Need for blood transfusion | The number of patient need for blood transfusion | at the end of the surgery | |
Secondary | Postoperative Ramsey sedation | patient awake, anxious, agitated or restless 2 patient awake -1co operative, oriented and tranquil 3 patient drowsy with respond to command 4 patient asleep brisk response to glabella tap or loud auditory sound 5 patient asleep with sluggish response to stimulus 6 patient hasno response to nail bed pressure or othernoxious stimuli | for the first hour postoperative | |
Secondary | Simplified post operative nausea and vomiting score | using impact scale score evaluation | for the first 24 hour postoperative | |
Secondary | Recovery time | time needed to reach modified aldrete score> or=9) | one hour after extubation | |
Secondary | Heart rate (HR) | 15 minutes after the start of the hypotensive agent | ||
Secondary | surgical field assessment | By the surgeon interms of bleeding and visibility using a 6-option Liker-scale scale adapted from Fromme el al. (26): 0 = no bleeding; 1 = minor bleeding, but no aspiration required; 2 = minor bleeding, aspiration required; 3 = minor bleeding, frequent aspiration required; 4 = moderate bleeding, visible? only with aspiration; 5 = severe bleeding, continuous aspiration required | 2 hours intraoperative |
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