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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Terminated

Administrative data

NCT number NCT00357929
Other study ID # 23214
Secondary ID
Status Terminated
Phase N/A
First received July 27, 2006
Last updated October 18, 2017
Start date August 2006
Est. completion date June 14, 2007

Study information

Verified date October 2017
Source Milton S. Hershey Medical Center
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

Some patients receiving mechanical ventilation have difficulty weaning off the ventilator because of physiological factors such as pre-existing lung disease, respiratory distress syndrome, and trauma among others. Allowing patients to become hypercarbic (increased blood bicarbonate level) may make it easier for these patients to be taken off the ventilator and resume breathing on their own.


Description:

The primary objective of this research is to assess the utility of permissive hypercarbia (PH) in the weaning of patients with risk factors for difficult weaning from mechanical ventilation. This pilot study seeks to validate the concept that PH will significantly improve the ability of patients to be weaned from mechanical ventilation and change the approach that physicians take to ventilator weaning for many patients.

Null Hypothesis: Patients with PH will not be weaned from mechanical ventilation more rapidly than those not receiving PH.

Patients with significant lung disease fail weaning from mechanical ventilation either as a result of an inability to oxygenate the blood or to adequately remove carbon dioxide. This results in longer Intensive Care Unit stays and increased morbidity and mortality as these patients have prolonged periods of mechanical ventilation. This study will focus on patients who have failure to adequately remove carbon dioxide (ventilatory failure) and endeavors to evaluate a method for enhanced carbon dioxide elimination by altering the acid-base status of the patients utilizing permissive hypercarbia (PH). PH will be used specifically during weaning from mechanical ventilation to enhance carbon dioxide elimination during this period. PH has used by some intensivists for this purpose but has not been critically evaluated in a clinical study.

Mechanical ventilation using PH maintains an increased CO2 with either partial or complete metabolic compensation. Therefore, the blood pH is either normal or slightly reduced. In patients who are adequately sedated, the reduced pH is well tolerated without respiratory distress or air hunger. However, if PH is to be used in awake patients as proposed here, full metabolic compensation would be required to avoid air hunger while being weaned from ventilator support. The metabolic compensation is produced either as a result of a renal compensation or, more typically in the ICU setting, iatrogenically. Metabolic alkalosis can be produced through the administration of alkalinizing agents or as a result of gastric suctioning or from contraction alkalosis resulting from the use of diuretics.

PH enhances CO2 elimination by increasing the concentration of CO2 in the exhaled gas. The pulmonary capillary pCO2 is elevated and therefore so is the alveolar CO2 and the exhaled or end-tidal CO2. Thus more CO2 is exhaled in an equal volume of exhaled gas. This increased CO2 concentration reduces the minute ventilation required to exhale the CO2 produced by the patient. PH will decrease the minute ventilation requirement even in patients with an increased dead space and will facilitate weaning these patients from mechanical ventilation by the same mechanism as just described.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Terminated
Enrollment 3
Est. completion date June 14, 2007
Est. primary completion date June 14, 2007
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Adult (> 18 yo) patients in the intensive care units at the Hershey Medical Center who are on mechanical ventilation

- and whose clinical course permits weaning from mechanical ventilation

- and are felt to have risk factors for difficult weaning. (Risk factors will include patients with rib fractures, pulmonary contusions, obesity (BMI >30), or history of COPD or other significant lung disease.)

- all patients will have failed (rapid shallow breathing index >105) a 30 minute spontaneous breathing test.

Exclusion Criteria:

- Overt signs of sepsis including: a temperature > 38.5F, white blood cell count > 14000, systolic blood pressure < 100 mmHg,

- intracranial hypertension (ICP > 18 or based upon clinical exam and/or history),

- or pulmonary hypertension (by history or PAsys > 40 mmHg).

- or history of recent(past 6 mos)MI

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Procedure:
Permissive hypercarbia


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Penn State Milton S. Hershey Medical Center Hershey Pennsylvania

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Milton S. Hershey Medical Center

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Time for weaning from positive pressure support mechanical ventilation
Secondary Percentage of subjects/group successfully weaned within seven days of trial participation
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