Bariatric Patients Clinical Trial
Official title:
Estimation of the Incidence of Hypercapnea in Morbidly Obese Post-Surgical Patients Using the Sen Tec Transcutaneous PCO2 Monitor
| Verified date | August 2012 |
| Source | William Beaumont Hospitals |
| Contact | n/a |
| Is FDA regulated | No |
| Health authority | United States: Institutional Review Board |
| Study type | Observational |
Hypercapnea is a condition where there is too much carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood. Carbon
dioxide is a gaseous product of the body's metabolism and is normally expelled through the
lungs (breathed out). Hypoventilation (or respiratory depression) occurs when the
ventilation is inadequate to perform needed gas exchange; therefore resulting in decreased
levels of oxygen and increased levels of carbon dioxide in the blood. It can cause an
increased concentration of carbon dioxide and respiratory acidosis. Obesity is a
multi-system disorder, particularly involving the respiratory (lungs/breathing) and
cardiovascular (heart/vessel) systems. Obesity increases the risks for surgical and
anesthetic complications before, during and following surgery.
Bariatric (weight loss) surgery is becoming a common procedure among the morbidly obese (100
lbs or more above normal weight), with recent studies highlighting the long-term health
implications of surgical weight reduction, to include a decreased risk of hypertension (high
blood pressure) and diabetes (increased sugar in blood). Obese patients are at increased
risk of sleep apnea (stop breathing while asleep) and hypoventilation even without surgery,
and these risks increase following administration of medications typically given during and
after major surgical procedures. Hypoventilation can lead to hypercapnea, sedation
(sleepiness), and acidosis (blood imbalance), resulting in further respiratory compromise
(breathing problems) and cardiac morbidity (heart problems) as well as the risks inherent in
re-intubating (needing to have a breathing tube place down into the lungs) the
obese.Monitoring for hypoventilation can be difficult. Quantitative capnography (measuring
carbon dioxide) is only appropriate for intubated patients (on a ventilator - breathing
tube), and pulse oximetry (clip on finger that measures oxygen levels) does not adequately
detect hypoventilation in patients receiving supplemental (additional) oxygen. Serial
arterial blood gas (blood taken from an artery to measure oxygen level in blood) measurement
is expensive, time-consuming, and painful. Continuous respiratory rate monitoring is
possible, and has been considered the gold standard of apnea detection (seeing stopped
breathing), yet is seldom used. As a result of these limitations, there is currently no
simple, cost-effective, and reliable means of detecting hypoventilation in this patient
population either in the recovery room or inpatient unit. Transcutaneous (across the skin)
pCO2 (t-pCO2) monitoring has been validated as a reliable and reproducible means of
measuring pCO2 in newborn babies, and recently has also been used in adults, primarily in
the ICU (intensive care unit) setting. When compared to standard end-tidal CO2 measurement,
t-pCO2 correlates better with pCO2 in the intraoperative period in both thin and obese
patients. SenTec, is the manufacturer of a device used to measure t-pCO2 for this project.
This study is designed to detect the incidence of hypercapnea in morbidly obese
post-surgical bariatric patients in the postoperative period using the SenTec t-pCO2
monitor.
Objective:To determine the incidence of hypoventilation and hypercapnea as measured by
transcutaneous pCO2 monitoring in post-surgical bariatric patients as compared to thin
controls.
| Status | Completed |
| Enrollment | 22 |
| Est. completion date | August 2012 |
| Est. primary completion date | August 2012 |
| Accepts healthy volunteers | Accepts Healthy Volunteers |
| Gender | Both |
| Age group | 18 Years to 65 Years |
| Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria: - Consenting male or female adults aged 18-65, scheduled to undergo elective laparoscopic gastric bypass (morbidly obese) or patients scheduled to undergo an abdominal procedure (thin) which will similarly require an overnight admission to Beaumont/Royal Oak Hospital - Women must be nonpregnant and nonlactating, postmenopausal or surgically sterile. Women of childbearing age must have a negative pregnancy test (performed per standard hospital protocol Exclusion Criteria: - History of COPD (lung/breathing disease) - Home O2 (oxygen) dependence (home CPAP use is acceptable) - Pregnancy/nursing - Scheduled to receive epidural pain management.(Epidural pain management is the continuous infusion of medication(s) into the space surrounding the spinal cord called the epidural space.) - Participation in another clinical trial within the past 30days - Skin condition that would interfere with the application of the forehead sensor |
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
| Country | Name | City | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | William Beaumont Hospital | Royal Oak | Michigan |
| Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
|---|---|
| William Beaumont Hospitals |
United States,
| Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Primary | To determine the incidence of hypoventilation and hypercapnea as measured by transcutaneous pCO2 monitoring in post surgical bariatric patients as compared to thin controls. | one year | Yes |
| Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Completed |
NCT00497627 -
Quality of Life and Cardiometabolic Risk Factors in Patients After Debanding
|
N/A |