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Low Flow Anesthesia clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT06097806 Recruiting - Low Flow Anesthesia Clinical Trials

Effects of Different Fresh Gas Flows on Carboxyhemoglobin Levels and Postoperative Patient Outcomes in Pediatric Cardiovascular Surgery

Start date: June 1, 2024
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Low flow anesthesia; It is an anesthesia practice in which, after absorbing at least 50% of the exhaled air and carbon dioxide (CO2) using a semi-closed rebreathing system, the unused anesthetic gases are mixed with a certain amount of fresh gas and then completely or partially returned to the patient in the next inspiration. Theoretically, when low flow anesthesia is compared to high or normal flow anesthesia; it is known to have advantages such as using less inhalation agent, preserving mucociliary activity, preventing microatelectasis, preserving the amount of moisture, and reducing temperature loss. In studies conducted in different fresh gas flows, it has been observed that CO, which is thought to accumulate in the body by rebreathing in a closed circuit, increases as a result of the chemical interaction and dry CO2 absorbent. However, there is no evidence in these studies that low-flow anesthesia increases CO accumulation and alters hemodynamics. In our clinic, low-flow and high-flow anesthesia technics are both being used. In this study, we aimed to evaluate the effects of high- and low-flow sevoflurane anesthesia applied with a closed system on perioperative carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) levels and hemodynamic system in pediatric cardiovascular surgery cases.

NCT ID: NCT05773417 Recruiting - Low Flow Anesthesia Clinical Trials

Changes in Quality of Recovery With Low-Flow Anesthesia (QoRinLowflow)

(QoRLowflow
Start date: January 1, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Postoperative recovery quality is as important as patient satisfaction and clinical results in terms of a fast and high-quality surgical process. This study was conducted to investigate the effect of low-flow anesthesia applications on the quality of patient recovery by evaluating the 'Quality of Recovery' (QoR40) test and the perception tests (PQRS Cognitive test) performed in the early postoperative period.