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Clinical Trial Summary

Cardiac surgery can evolve with complications in the postoperative period, atelectasis and hypoxemia are the major pulmonary dysfunctions. They can lead to a prolonged length of stay in the hospital, increasing morbidity and mortality. In order to prevent or reduce such complications noninvasive ventilation (NIV) has been used in the postoperative period in a prophylactic and therapeutic way. The use of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) is widely practice in intensive care unit (ICU), being used in patients under mechanical ventilation, NIV and exercises with intermittent positive pressure. The recruitment maneuver (RM) consists of sustained increase of pressure in the airway using PEEP in individuals with hypoxemia, in order to minimize the deleterious effects from alveolar collapse, providing a more homogeneous ventilation of the pulmonary parenchyma increasing the pulmonary area available for gas exchange and, consequently, arterial oxygenation. In recent years the increase in the application of PEEP in cardiac patients under has shown great benefits and the use of NIV to improve oxygenation by the reversal of atelectasis is already used and recommended in hospital routine. Despite NIV being used in great proportion, the relevant literature is poor in showing studies with NIV associated with RM in postoperative period of cardiac surgery. Therefore, the aims of this study are to evaluate if the use of NIV associated with RM improves oxygenation and if it can be safely applied in coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) postoperative patients.


Clinical Trial Description

This work was a controlled and randomized clinical trial, where patients were analyzed in postoperative period of CABG with CPB. The protocol study was approved by Ethics Committee of the Faculty of Medicine, University os São Paulo and the Ethics Committee of the Hospital do Coração. Written informed consent was obtained from the patients or their surrogates at the thime of their enrollment.

Patients, doctors and nursing team were blinded to which group the patient was allocated, only the physiotherapy team, responsible for applying NIV therapy in the study, was aware of group allocation after randomization.

All the patients were ventilated in Servo I (MAQUET Critical Care AB™, Sweden) and used the FitLife total face mask (Philips Respironics™, USA).

Randomization was performed using a computer-based software. Patients eligible to the study were randomly assigned to the Control Group (CG) or Recruitment Group (RG).

CG used NIV for 30 minutes with pressure support for a tidal volume of 6 mL/Kg, PEEP 8 cm H2O, fractional inspired oxygen (FiO2) for a peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) ≥ 95%. RG used NIV with RM with PEEP 15 cm H2O and afterwards 20 cm H2O remaining 2 minutes in each level, then being maintained in NIV for 30 minutes with pressure support for a tidal volume of 6 mL/Kg, PEEP 8 cm H2O, FiO2 for a SpO2 ≥ 95%.

Patients were monitored during the whole NIV session.The RM would be interrupted and medical staff would be called to check the patient if any clinical instability occurred during or after RM, such as barotrauma, respiratory instability, hemodynamic instability and arrhythmia.

Medical staff would take the required measures for the safety of the patient.

Safety criteria for Interruption of RM:

- respiratory rate > 35 breaths per minute;

- heart rate >120 beats per minute or < 20 points from baseline;

- Systolic blood pressure < 90 mmHg or > 16 mmHg;

- Cardiac arrhythmia;

- Patient's request. The patients used NIV three times per day until discharge from the ICU, the arterial blood gas and chest radiograph examinations were collected as sector routine. The arterial blood samples was collected after 2 minutes in room air and chest radiograph without NIV.

All postoperative patients of the ICU had NIV therapy once in the morning, once in the afternoon, once at night and only the physiotherapist applied NIV. All the patients were guided concerning how their therapy would be and, if they had queries, they were clarified before the start. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02913391
Study type Interventional
Source University of Sao Paulo
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date April 2016
Completion date September 2017

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