Neuromuscular Blockade Clinical Trial
Official title:
Comparison of Electromyography-based TetraGraph and Acceleromyography-based TOF-Watch SX Neuromuscular Monitors Under Clinical Conditions
Anesthesiologists are often required to give certain drugs, called muscle relaxants to the patients for surgery. These drugs make the people weak for the procedure to make the work of the surgeon easier and prevent unexpected movements. The effect of these drugs must be terminated by the end of the procedures to ensure that the patients can breathe normally. Over the years several monitors have been developed to monitor the effect of these drugs. The monitors use different principles to measure muscle function. Some monitors are integrated into anesthesia machines while others are battery-operated, portable devices. The aim of the present study is two compare monitors using different technologies. Both monitors stimulate a peripheral nerve at the wrist that makes the thumb twitch. The older device (TOF-Watch SX) measures the acceleration of thumb movement, the new device (TetraGraph) measures the electrical activity of the muscle that moves the thumb. The two devices will be connected so that with one simulation both types of signals can be recorded and analyzed. The monitors will be used during the surgeries as described by the manufacturer. The study will not influence the surgical procedure or the anesthetic of the patients. The aim of the study is to collect data on how the two monitors correlate, since they measure neuromuscular function by different technologies (acceleromyography and electromyography).
The aim of this single center, one-arm, observational, prospective, non-inferiority study is
to compare neuromuscular data obtained with two neuromuscular monitors. The two monitors are
the electromyography-based TetraGraph neuromuscular monitor and the acceleromyography-based
TOF-WATCH SX device.
The study will enroll 50 patients undergoing elective surgeries that require muscle
relaxation. Patients will be only enrolled after written informed consent is obtained.
Exclusion criteria include: neuromuscular disease in patient history, patient taking any
medication that affects neuromuscular transmission, open wound or sores at the site of
electrode placement, expected difficult airway, pregnancy or breastfeeding state, or
implanted pacemaker.
The study will be conducted using one of the patient's arms. Both neuromuscular monitors will
be applied on the same arm. The monitors will be connected by optical cable link to
synchronize nerve stimulation and data recording. The aim of this setting is to obtain both
acceleromyography and electromyography signals of the adductor pollicis muscle in response to
ulnar nerve stimulation. This setting ensures identical stimulation conditions for the two
monitors. Only the TOF-Watch SX will be used for nerve stimulation while the TOF-Watch will
collect acceleromyography data of the thumb and TetraGraph will collect the electromyography
data of the adductor pollicis muscle.
The ulnar nerve will be stimulated via single use electrocardiography electrodes used by
TOF-Watch SX. The piezoelectric probe of TOF-Watch SX will be applied on the thumb via hand
adapter, according to the manufacturer's instructions. The stimulating electrodes of
TetraGraph will be isolated, since the device will not deliver electrical stimulation, only
register the compound muscle action potentials of the adductor pollicis muscle evoked by
TOF-Watch SX stimulation. The sensing electrodes of TetraGraph will be applied above the
thenar and the interphalangeal joint of the thumb.
The TetraGraph monitor used for the study has a modified software compared to the
commercially available monitors. This study device is used only for the current study.
Also, the cable of the TOF-Watch SX monitor has been modified to connect to the TetraGraph
monitor for synchronization . The results of the responses analyzed by the TetraGraph device
will not be used for clinical care decisions.
Neuromuscular monitoring will be started after the induction of anesthesia before the
administration of neuromuscular blocking agent and terminated at the extubation of the
patient. After calibration, the TOF-Watch will be left to stimulate automatically every 15
sec. Neuromuscular monitoring will be performed during surgery according to clinical
standards, it will be stopped before extubation to avoid patient discomfort associated with
neurostimulation.
During deep neuromuscular block the examiner will deliver post tetanic count stimulation
every 5 min.
TOF-Watch SX data will be stored on a laptop computer using the devices software. TetraGraph
is using a built-in SD card for data collection.
Beside acceleromyography and electromyography train-of-four ratios, train-of-four counts and
post tetanic counts the following data will be recorded in a clinical research form:
- date of surgery, type of surgery,
- patient identification number, patient's sex, weight, height, BMI, dominant hand side,
- time of anesthesia induction, drugs used to induce anesthesia
- time of starting neuromuscular monitoring
- time of muscle relaxant administration, type and dose of muscle relaxant
- time of tracheal intubation and extubation,
- time of beginning and end of surgery
- time of reversal agent administration, type and dose of reversal agent
- use of surgical devices
To avoid uncertainty, only the data of TOF-Watch SX will be provided to the anesthesiology
team for clinical use. TetraGraph data will be kept blinded from healthcare providers. All
clinical decisions will be made according to TOF-Watch SX measurements, as per current
clinical care. If any doubt arises regarding the reliability of the data delivered by
TOF-Watch SX, the anesthesia workstations' built-in NMT modules (Infinity Trident NMT
Smartpod, Draeger, Lübeck, Germany) will be used to guide clinical care.
Propofol target control infusion with bispectral index monitoring will be used to provide
anesthesia. The administration of muscle relaxants, reversal agents and time of intubation
and extubation will be at the discretion of the attending anesthesiologist as per usual
clinical routine.
All patients will be monitored postoperatively for one day to detect any unexpected adverse
events.
Statistical analysis:
Data will be analyzed offline after the completion of the study. Based on a priori sample
size calculation, 50 patients will be enrolled in the study. Paired T-test and Bland-Altman
analysis will be performed to examine the agreement between the two devices.
;
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Recruiting |
NCT05558969 -
The Effect of Magnesium Use in Reversal of Neuromuscular Block With Sugammadex
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03168308 -
Sugammadex vs. Neostigmine for Neuromuscular Blockade Reversal in Thoracic Surgical Patients
|
Phase 4 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT03978780 -
Erector Spinae Block vs. Placebo Block Study
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02912039 -
Electromyographic Assessment of the TetraGraph in Normal Volunteers
|
||
Completed |
NCT02892045 -
Mindray Neuromuscular Transmission Transducer
|
||
Completed |
NCT03427385 -
Minimum Local Anesthetic Dose for Adductor Canal Block
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT01450813 -
The Effect of Neuromuscular Blockade on the Composite Variability Index (CVI) During Laryngoscopy
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT00535496 -
Relation Between TOF-Watch® SX and a Peripheral Nerve Stimulator After 4.0 mg.Kg-1 Sugammadex (P05698)
|
Phase 3 | |
Recruiting |
NCT05794503 -
Postoperative Urinary Retention After Reversal of Neuromuscular Block by Neostigmine Versus Sugammadex
|
Early Phase 1 | |
Not yet recruiting |
NCT05993390 -
Pharmacological Reversal of Neuromuscular Blockade in Critically Ill Patients
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT04609410 -
Bleeding in Laparoscopic Liver Surgery
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT03649672 -
The Validity and Tolerability of Awake Calibration of the TOF Watch SX Monitor
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05687253 -
Evaluation of Intubation Conditions Following BX1000 or Rocuronium in Subjects Undergoing Surgery
|
Phase 2 | |
Completed |
NCT05474638 -
Comparison of Mechanomyographic 100 Versus 200 Hz 5 Second Tetanic Fade Ratios During Neuromuscular Block Recovery
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05120999 -
Comparison of Onset of Neuromuscular Blockade With Electromyographic and Acceleromyographic Monitoring
|
||
Completed |
NCT03608436 -
The Effect of Low Pressure Pneumoperitoneum During Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery on Early Quality of Recovery
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT03572413 -
The Effect of Low Pressure Pneumoperitoneum During Laparoscopic Colorectal Surgery on Innate Immune Homeostasis.
|
Phase 4 | |
Recruiting |
NCT02930629 -
Residual Block in Postoperative Anaesthetic Care Unit
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT02932254 -
Magnesium Sulfate Effect Following the Reversal of Neuromuscular Blockade Induced by Rocuronium With Sugammadex
|
Phase 4 | |
Completed |
NCT01828385 -
Effect of Magnesium on the Recovery Time of Neuromuscular Blockade With Sugammadex
|
Phase 4 |