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General Anesthetic Drug Overdose clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT03230929 Completed - Clinical trials for General Anesthetic Drug Overdose

The Effect of Electromyogram (EMG) Activity on Anesthetic Depth Monitoring

Start date: August 1, 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Currently, a lot of equipments based on Bispectral index (BIS) is used clinically in order to measure the depth of anesthesia. Although BIS is used for the measurement of the presence of consciousness or degree of sedation during general anesthesia, it could be influenced by factors that affect or interfere with the activity of EEG because it is a numerical value which is measured by analyzing EEG. The BIS electrode for EEG analysis should be attached to the patient's forehead and the EEG signal is 0.5 - 30 Hz, the EMG signal is 30 - 300 Hz, and the BIS analyzes the 0 - 47 Hz signal. Therefore, 30 -47 Hz EMG signal may influence the BIS value and the BIS value may differ from the actual. In patients with complete muscle relaxation, the change in BIS varies in proportion to the concentration of anesthetic, but in a state with less muscle relaxation or arousal period of anesthesia when recovery of muscle relaxation occurs, BIS value may not accurately reflects the change in the depth of anesthesia. Although there is a study on the influence of the degree of muscle relaxation on BIS value, there is no study on whether phase lag entropy (PLE) measuring anesthesia depth based on different mechanism from BIS is affected by status of muscle relaxation. After measuring BIS and PLE at the same time, I will compare both of them and investigate the reliability of the measurement of the depth of anesthesia of PLE and how electromyogram activity affects PLE.

NCT ID: NCT02886806 Completed - Clinical trials for Hemodynamic Instability

Fully Automated Anesthesia, Analgesia and Fluid Management

Start date: October 2016
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

Evaluate the feasibility and quality of automated anesthesia, analgesia and fluid management based on a combination of several physiological variables (bispectral index [BIS], stroke volume [SV], and stroke volume variation [SVV]) using 2 independent physiologic closed-loop systems (PCLS) in patients undergoing high risk vascular surgery