Preoxygenation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improvement of Oxygenation During Apnoea by i-THRIVE (Infant Transnasal Humidified Rapid Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange): A Single-centre Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial.
Improvement of oxygenation during apnoea by i-THRIVE Infant Transnasal Humidified Rapid Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange A single-centre prospective randomized controlled trial.
High-Flow nasal cannula therapy is the administration of heated, humidified and blended
air/oxygen via nasal cannula at rates of at least 2 L/kg bodyweight /min. This high-flow
nasal cannula therapy was developed in neonatal intensive care unit for preterm babies with
respiratory pauses as an alternative to continuous pressure support (CPAP). Due to its ease
of use and safety to apply to a wide range of indication, this oxygen delivery therapy is
increasingly gaining interest for providing respiratory support in paediatric and adult
patients with respiratory failure in the ICU. High-flow nasal cannula therapy is applied in
preterm infant with respiratory distress syndrome, apnoea of prematurity or a respiratory
support after extubation. In the adult population the use of HFNCT focuses on hypoxemic
respiratory failure and improvement reduction of hypoxemia during intubation in the
anesthesia environment. A new application for high-flow nasal cannula therapy in adults is
the extension of apnoea time in patients with difficult airways who are undergoing general
anesthesia. In this environment a new term for this kind of oxygen therapy was created:
THRIVE transnasal humidified rapid-insufflation ventilatory exchange. To distinguish this
kind of high-flow nasal cannula therapy in apnoeic patients from the one in the paediatric
ICU or ward the investigators use the term i-THRIVE for infant transnasal humidified rapid
insufflation ventilation exchange.
Due to the increased oxygen consumption and the reduced functional residual capacity,
neonates, infants, and small children have a reduced apnoea tolerance compared to adults.
Furthermore infants and small children have a greater closing capacity, which increases the
airway collapse under general anesthesia and muscle paralysis. A direct consequence is that
hypoxemia is very likely to occur after cessation of spontaneous or assisted ventilation
during induction of anesthesia. Apnoea without supplemental oxygen leads to hypoxemia in a
1-year-old infant without preoxygenation within seconds. All paediatric (and adult) patients
undergoing general anesthesia have at least a brief period of apnoea during intubation
between the time the face-mask is removed from the patient and the tube is placed in the
trachea. Therefore, at least short phases of deoxygenation may occur.
However if anesthesia needs to be provided in emergency situations or in the presence of a
difficult airway, the rate of complication increases rapidly. In these circumstances methods
that reduce desaturation incidents during prolonged difficult intubation are desirable. Due
to oxygen toxicity in neonates or small children, prevention of hypoxemia with oxygen
concentration below 60% would be favourable in this setting. Despite promising pilot results
with high-flow nasal cannula therapy, it is unknown whether this technique is superior to
low-flow oxygenation with high concentration and whether it is necessary to apply high-flow
nasal cannula therapy with high (80-100%) versus low (30-50%) concentration oxygen.
This study investigates under controlled circumstances the concept of i-THRIVE to prolong
the apnoea time without deoxygenation and to improve safety of airway management in
paediatric patients. Furthermore, this study enables to quantify the effects of different
oxygen concentrations with high-flow nasal cannula therapy and distinguishes it better from
conventional low-flow apnoeic oxygenation methods.
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