Dyspnea Clinical Trial
— Sensopnée2Official title:
Sensory and Emotional Modulation of Dyspnea Under Artificial Ventilation in the Intensive Care Unit
Rationale: Half of the patients receiving mechanical ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU) have moderate to severe dyspnea. This dyspnea has a negative impact on the duration of mechanical ventilation, on patients' comfort and could be involved in the genesis of post-traumatic stress syndromes, a frequent complication of intensive care. Modifying ventilation parameters does not always relieve dyspnea and administering morphine prolongs the duration of mechanical ventilation. Dyspnea has, in addition to its sensory component, an emotional component. The possibility to distract the patients' attention or to modulate their emotions in order to relieve their dyspnea could therefore represent an innovative therapeutic alternative devoid of side effects. Objectives: To evaluate the effect of auditory and sensory extra respiratory stimuli on the sensation of dyspnea in intensive care patients undergoing mechanical, invasive or non-invasive ventilation. Methods: 45 intensive care patients under artificial ventilation will be exposed, according to their randomization arm, to the following two stimuli for a duration of 10 minutes: - standard relaxing music piece versus "pink" noise; - fresh air on the face versus fresh air on the thigh. The effect of this stimulus will be compared to a randomized control, these two conditions will be separated by a wash-out period. An pressure support (+5) increment will be performed to ensure comparability of subsequent experimental sequences and their effect on dyspnea. Dyspnea will be assessed in terms of intensity (visual analog scale) and characterized sensorially. Will also be evaluated during the different conditions: pain, anxiety and stress (sympathetic/parasympathetic balance) and extra-diaphragmatic electromyographic activity. Ethical framework: research involving the human person at risk and minimal constraints (physiology study that does not entail any risk for the patients). Expected results and prospects: the investigators hypothesize that pleasant extra-respiratory sensory stimulation significantly reduces the intensity of dyspnea in artificially ventilated patients without any change in ventilator settings and pharmacological intervention. This reduction in dyspnea is associated with decreased anxiety and stress levels. This study will bring new, easy-to-use and side-effect-free tools to the therapeutic arsenal for the relief of dyspnea in mechanically ventilated patients.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 45 |
Est. completion date | November 26, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | August 27, 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Mechanical ventilation : invasive for at least 48 hours or non-invasive for at least 24 hours, sequential or continuous - Dyspnea = 4 on a visual analogic scale (VAS) from 0 to 10 - Absence of delirium (evaluated by the CAM-ICU score) ; - Communicative patient Exclusion Criteria: - Patients on ECMO or decarboxylation ; - Patients on long-term left ventricular support; - Patients postoperatively following any surgery (pain from the procedure may interfere with dyspnea); - Protected minors and adults; - Pregnant women. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
France | Service de Pneumologie et Réanimation Médicale, Groupe Hospitalier Pitié Salpêtrière | Paris |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Association pour le Développement et l'Organisation de la Recherche en Pneumologie et sur le Sommeil |
France,
Abernethy AP, Currow DC, Frith P, Fazekas BS, McHugh A, Bui C. Randomised, double blind, placebo controlled crossover trial of sustained release morphine for the management of refractory dyspnoea. BMJ. 2003 Sep 6;327(7414):523-8. — View Citation
Lansing RW, Gracely RH, Banzett RB. The multiple dimensions of dyspnea: review and hypotheses. Respir Physiol Neurobiol. 2009 May 30;167(1):53-60. doi: 10.1016/j.resp.2008.07.012. Epub 2008 Jul 25. Review. — View Citation
Morélot-Panzini C, Demoule A, Straus C, Zelter M, Derenne JP, Willer JC, Similowski T. Dyspnea as a noxious sensation: inspiratory threshold loading may trigger diffuse noxious inhibitory controls in humans. J Neurophysiol. 2007 Feb;97(2):1396-404. Epub 2006 Jul 26. — View Citation
Parshall MB, Schwartzstein RM, Adams L, Banzett RB, Manning HL, Bourbeau J, Calverley PM, Gift AG, Harver A, Lareau SC, Mahler DA, Meek PM, O'Donnell DE; American Thoracic Society Committee on Dyspnea. An official American Thoracic Society statement: update on the mechanisms, assessment, and management of dyspnea. Am J Respir Crit Care Med. 2012 Feb 15;185(4):435-52. doi: 10.1164/rccm.201111-2042ST. — View Citation
Schmidt M, Demoule A, Polito A, Porchet R, Aboab J, Siami S, Morelot-Panzini C, Similowski T, Sharshar T. Dyspnea in mechanically ventilated critically ill patients. Crit Care Med. 2011 Sep;39(9):2059-65. doi: 10.1097/CCM.0b013e31821e8779. — View Citation
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Detection and quantification of dyspnea intensity change | Dyspnea will initially be searched for with absence or presence. If present, it will then be quantified using a visual analog scale graduated from 0 ("absence of respiratory discomfort") to 10 ("maximum respiratory discomfort"). | At the baseline and during the interventions | |
Secondary | Anxiety | Anxiety will be sought initially. If it is present, it will then be evaluated using a visual analog scale graduated from 0 ("absence of anxiety") to 10 ("maximum anxiety"). | At the baseline and during the interventions | |
Secondary | Mesure of pain | Patients in resuscitation can be painful, which can interfere with the perception of dyspnea. Pain will be sought first.If it is present, it will then be assessed using a visual analogue scale graduated from 0 ("no pain") to 10 ("maximum pain").
Discomfort caused by the stimulus The inconvenience caused by the stimuli applied to the patient will be quantified, if any, using a visual analog scale graduated from 0 ("no inconvenience") to 10 ("maximum inconvenience"). |
At the baseline and during the interventions | |
Secondary | Electromyogram of extra-diaphragmatic inspiratory muscles | Electromyogram (EMG) of the extra-diaphragmatic inspiratory muscles: the amplitude of the EMG signal of the extra-diaphragmatic inspiratory muscles is proportional to the intensity of the dyspnea. It will be collected by self-adhesive surface electrodes of the same type as those usually used to collect the ECG signal in intensive care patients. A distance of 2 cm will separate the two electrodes. The position of the electrodes will depend on the muscle whose EMG activity is collected: scalene muscles, intercostal parasternal muscles, Alae nasi muscles, etc. The EMG signal will be amplified (PowerLab, AD Instruments, Hastings, UK), then sampled at a frequency of 10 kHz and finally filtered between 40 and 500 Hz. | At the baseline and during the interventions |
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