Aspiration Clinical Trial
Official title:
Upper Esophageal Sphincter Pressure Variation During Anesthesia Induction
Upper esophageal sphincter is a high pressure zone of the pharynx and protects airway from aspiration of esophageal or gastric contents. Existing literature concludes that many of the drugs employed to induce general anesthesia descend that pressure. However, most participants of those studies were under 64 years old and were given sedatives or local anesthetics to ease the esophageal measurements which can interfere with the results obtained. The hypothesis was to confirm the hypnotics effects on upper esophageal sphincter with the aim to find out which of them could be a better choice in order to reduce airway aspiration risk during induction of anesthesia, specially during emergency surgery, when a empty stomach is not guaranteed. Twenty patients who were planned for general surgery were studied: 12 men and 8 women, aged 39 to 84 years old. The effect of three commonly used hypnotics was tested: propofol, etomidate, and thiopental. Written informed consent was explained to all participants who freely signed it after having understood and accepted it. After 6-8 hours fast, patients were monitored with entropy (which gives information about patients´ level of consciousness), electrocardiogram, pulse oximetry (measures blood oxygen), and sphingomanometry (measures blood pressure). Registry of upper esophageal sphincter pressure was obtained through solid state high resolution manometry. A lubricated manometric probe was introduced through the nostril to locate it from the pharynx to the stomach using no sedation. After 1 minute to make the patient feel more comfortable, the induction of anesthesia took place employing one of the three drugs for this purpose mentioned above. Comparison of upper esophageal sphincter pressures before and after the hypnotic administration, should give information about which of the three hypnotics, if any, would not led to an unprotected airway and so at increased risk of aspiration.
BACKGROUND
Upper esophageal sphincter is a high pressure zone, behind the cricoid cartilage, which
protects airway from aspiration. It consists on striated muscle fibers distributed in two
zones: rapid twich oblique fibers correspondent to tyropharyngeal muscle and rapid but mostly
slow twich horizontal fibers belonging to cricopharyngeal muscle. This permits sphincter
maintain a constant basal tone but, at the same time, respond quickly to reflexes (1).
Upper esophageal sphincter pressure is distributed asymmetrically being greater
anteroposteriorly than laterally. Peak anterior pressure is located more cranially than peak
posterior pressure (2).
This makes manometric measurements difficult and some unreliable, unless high resolution
manometry is used. Upper esophageal sphincter pressure is labile: it decreases with age and
deterioration of the level of consciousness; while increases with stress, anxiety,
inspiration and phonation. Patients referring dysphagia or gastroesophageal reflux may
present altered manometric measurements (3).
Upper esophageal sphincter has a dynamic function, taking part during burps, in deglutition,
and airway reflexes such as: esophagus-sphincter reflex, glottic- pharynx reflex and coughing
( 3).
Studies using propofol and sevoflurane at subhypnotic concentrations have shown a decrease in
upper esophageal sphincter pressure, as well as pharynx descoordination (4). Midazolam at
sedative doses was implicated in lowering upper esophageal sphincter pressure. Vanner et al
made an anesthesia induction using midazolam, thiopental or ketamine, concluding that, except
for the last one, all drugs caused a decrease in upper esophageal sphincter pressure. In
another study of the same working group, inhalational anesthesia using protoxide and
halothane was compared to intravenous anesthesia with thiopental. Upper esophageal sphincter
pressure only descended under thiopental (5,6).
Since aspiration depends not only on upper esophageal sphincter but also on lower esophageal
sphincter and barrier pressure, it is important to know how drugs affect them: Thiopental,
opiates, dexmedetomidine and propofol may diminish lower esophageal sphincter tone (7).
Thörn K. et al studied the effect of sevoflurane on lower esophageal sphincter pressure and
barrier pressure, objecting a statistically significant descend in both of them (8).
Some studies do not find an implication of propofol in lowering upper esophageal pressure
(9).
Propofol, etomidate, and thiopental effect on upper esophageal sphincter pressure was
evaluated in this study. All of them potentiate the inhibitory effect of GABA
(gamma-amino-butiric acid) neurotransmisor; etomidate and thiopental also depress ascending
activating reticular system. To measure how they affect level of consciousness, entropy, a
parameter obtained from electroencephalic signal registration, has been used. Specifically,
State Entropy (SE) was used, which computes over the frequency range of 0,8 to 32 Hz. Entropy
monitoring has been validated using different hypnotics, being compared to other types of EEG
records , as Bispectral Index (BIS) (10).
General anesthesia procedure for patients undergoing urgent surgery is usually done following
a "rapid sequence technique". In addition to the possibility of existing full stomach, airway
protection mechanisms may be altered during induction. That is why, finding a hypnotic, not
to affect or in a lesser manner, upper esophageal sphincter, would be of interest.
PATIENTS AND METHODS Duly approved by the ethics comitee of Clínico San Carlos Hospital of
Madrid in their meeting on the 8th of june of 2016 (act 6.1/16) the study was carried out
between january of 2017 and july of 2019. 43 patients to be going under general anesthesia
for programmed surgery were included, of which: 15 rejected taking part of the study; 3 did
not pass dysphagia or reflux tests; 5 patients were lost due to different causes (2 did not
tolerate the probe; in 2 cases the protocol failed; in 1 case there was a bias in manometric
measurements).
Finally, the study was reduced to 20 patients: 12 men and 8 women, aged between 39 and 84
years old; mean age was 65,05 (13,13). In reference to anesthetic risk, 15% of patients were
ASA I, 55% ASA II, and 30% were ASA III. Mean (sd) Body Mass Index was 26.70 (4.24) kg/m2.
Written informed consent was explained to all patients who freely signed it after having
understood and accepted it. Patients were distributed randomly in 3 groups depending on the
hypnotics they were receiving. During the progress of the investigation, given the
difficulties to find people who wanted to participate in the study, the comparative was
reduced to only 2 groups: propofol and etomidate. This explains the definitive distribution:
8 patients in propofol group; 9 in etomidate group; 3 in thiopental group.
Two anesthesiologists worked as research collaborators during each case. One of them was in
charge of proceeding with the induction as the protocol dictated, and another research
collaborator was exclusivelly dedicated to the informatic registry of all the parameters,
recording all together for each patient in a single archive corresponding to each
participant. A doctor specialized in gastroenterology, expert on manometry, was responsible
for introducing the manometric probe and making the consequent measurements, synchronizing
his work with that of the other two research collaborators mentioned above.
Once all data had been recorded, the main investigator, who ignored which medication had been
given to each patient, gathered all the information together. Each hypnotic had been assigned
to a different color so each patient was associated to a color and a number. In this way, any
influence on the interpretation of the results was avoided.
The protocol was as follows: After 6-8 hours fast, patients were monitored with entropy
(spectral entropy monitoring module, Healthcare Technologies ®), electrocardiogram, pulse
oximetry, and sphingomanometry (hemodynamic and respiratory monitoring module for S/5Avance®,
General Electric). A lubricated manometric probe was introduced through the nostril to locate
it from the pharynx to the stomach using no sedation. After 1 minute to permit the patient
get used to the probe and be calm. while receiving oxygen at 10 lpm through a face mask., an
initial (basal) manometric measure was noted. In this moment, the hypnotic was administered
during 30 s. (to emulate rapid-sequence induction) at the following doses: 2 mg/kg for
propofol, 0.4 mg/kg for etomidate or 4 mg/kg for thiopental. Afterwards, once entropy reached
a value of 60, a second measure of upper esophageal sphincter pressure was noted. In case
entropy did not fall to 60 or less, it was waited the necessary time for the hypnotic to make
its effect on level of consciousness (clinical signs such as loss of response, loss of eyelid
reflex, absence of sympathetic system activation such as tachycardia or hypertension were
indications of the patient´s state of consciousness in those cases). All measurements except
for manometry were recorded with an interval of 1 second through Datex-OhmedaTM S/5 Collect®
and data were collected in an excel chart. Later, it is all analized combining manometric,
entropy, hemodynamic and respiratory measurements. In case of oxygen saturation values of 93%
or less or mean arterial pressure descending 20% or more from basal, the record was stopped.
Statistical analysis Quantitative variables are described as median and interquartile range
due to their no normal distribution in this study. Due to the small size of the sample no
parametric tests are used. The study of the change that hypnotics cause on quantitative
variables is carried out through Wilcoxon test. Analizing differences between groups,
thiopental group is not taken into account given the small size of it. As a result,
statistical tests used to compare variables between different hypnotics do not include
thiopental group. Homogeneity of propofol and etomidate group is checked out through Mann-
Whitney or Chi squared test depending on the type of variable under study, quantitative or
cualitative, respectively. The study of parameters of interest (upper esophageal sphincter
pressure; entropy) drop is done through the percentage of change they experiment after the
hypnotic has been administered. The relationship of these two variables between both groups
of hypnotics is analyzed by Mann- Whitney test. Level of significance is considered of 5%.
Statistical software used was IBM SPSS Statistics v21.
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