Agitation Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safety, Feasibility & Effectiveness of Acupuncture as an Adjunct to Pharmacologic Treatment for Sedation and Analgesia in Mechanically Ventilated PICU Patients - A Pilot Study
The purpose of this study is to determine whether acupuncture is effective at improving comfort in children on a ventilator in the intensive care unit. Our hypothesis is that the patients receiving acupuncture will require less medications to keep them comfortable than those who receive sham or fake acupuncture.
Rationale: Use of narcotics and benzodiazepines is common in the pediatric intensive care
unit (PICU) to alleviate pain and anxiety, especially for patients who are mechanically
ventilated. Pain control and sedation decrease oxygen consumption, facilitate mechanical
ventilation, ensure patient safety and help patients tolerate nursing care. However, these
medications can also have negative consequences. Patients receiving greater amounts of
pharmacologic sedation in the intensive care unit (ICU) have longer duration of mechanical
ventilation and ICU length of stay. In fact, daily interruption of sedation shortens duration
of mechanical ventilation and ICU length of stay. Sedatives have also been associated with
development of delirium in ICU patients and linked to delusional and disturbing memories and
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after recovery from critical illness. Benzodiazepines
and opiates are associated with abnormal sleep architecture. Furthermore, patients experience
tolerance, physical dependency and withdrawal from these agents. Lastly, there is evidence
that sedatives, anesthetics and opiates are associated with neurotoxicity in animal studies
leading to growing concern about the potential effects of these agents on the developing
brains of children.
Novel Approach: In light of these negative aspects of pharmacologic sedation, we are looking
for alternative ways to provide comfort to critically ill children in the PICU. Acupuncture
has been found to be effective in reducing anxiety, acute pain, procedural pain,
post-operative pain, chronic pain, headache, infant colic, and has been found to reduce
anesthetic requirement during surgery.
Study Plan: We plan to randomize patients 6 months - 17 yrs old who are receiving mechanical
ventilation in the PICU to either acupuncture or sham acupuncture as an adjunct to standard
of care pharmacologic sedation as prescribed by the PICU medical team caring for the
patients. Our hypothesis is that those patients receiving acupuncture will require less
medications to keep them comfortable. Our study is powered (80%) to detect a 33% decrease in
pharmacologic sedation/analgesia.
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