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Clinical Trial Summary

This clinical trial aims to compare the effects of lidocaine, dexmedetomidine, esmolol, and magnesium on optic nerve sheath diameter and hemodynamic response to laryngoscopy. The participants will be patients determined to need intubation and general anesthesia for any elective surgery. Each participant will receive either lidocaine, dexmedetomidine, esmolol, magnesium, or none before anesthesia induction, according to randomization. The investigator will measure the optic nerve sheath diameter by ultrasonography before and after intubation. Researchers will compare the difference between optic nerve sheath diameter, systolic blood pressure, and heart rate before and after laryngoscopy and search for the most stable group. The trial aims to determine a general anesthesia induction protocol for patients sensitive to intracranial pressure changes reflected as optic nerve sheath diameter for easy monitoring.


Clinical Trial Description

Laryngoscopy and endotracheal intubation could have detrimental effects on patients with limited physiologic reserve to cope with the possible hemodynamic alterations caused by the sympathoadrenal response. Although it is known to be a short-lasting and reversible physiological alteration, it could lead to more profound destructive effects, especially in patients with possible elevated intracranial pressure, such as in multi-trauma or intracranial hemorrhage. Therefore, minimizing alterations due to general anesthesia induction and intubation has been essential to optimize qualified critical patient management. Various drugs through different routes have been studied, focusing on hemodynamic alterations. However, as the health services and capabilities of the anesthesiologists improve, changes in outcome measures, such as intracranial pressure, could be observed directly by the integration of optic nerve ultrasonography (ONUS) as a part of point of care ultrasonographic (POCUS) examination. Notably, the measurement of optic nerve sheath diameter (ONSD) has been proven to be related to intracranial pressure, and several studies have even presented cut-off values with high diagnostic accuracy for increased intracranial pressure. Therefore, investigating ONSD during endotracheal intubation is a non-invasive, time and cost-effective method to observe the precise effects of drugs that can establish stability during intubation. In this study, a wide variety of drugs from previous literature, lidocaine, dexmedetomidine, esmolol, and magnesium, has been chosen for their possible effectiveness in abolishing hemodynamic response to laryngoscopy. The study aims to compare the direct effect of these alternatives on ONSD during endotracheal intubation with concomitant hemodynamic changes. This study would like to emphasize POCUS and support the incorporation of ONUS as a valuable practice to improve general anesthesia management for fragile patients. METHODS The trial design is a double-blind, randomized controlled study with the approval of our Institutional ethics committee (dossier no: 106-2021). The participants were assessed within patients scheduled for any elective surgery needing endotracheal intubation after January 2024 for eligibility. After obtaining written informed consent, 100 patients (Five groups; 1:1 distribution; n=20) were allocated, and the study was conducted in a tertiary care hospital with the principles outlined in the Helsinki Declaration. Patients eligible for inclusion in this study are those aged 18 to 80 years who have undergone endotracheal intubation for general anesthesia and have an American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Physical Status classification of I to III. Patients are excluded if they had one of the following criteria: Patients allergic to dexmedetomidine, esmolol, lidocaine, magnesium; patients with uncontrolled hypertension or advanced heart failure with EF below 35%; patients with cardiac arrhythmia, especially Type 2 and 3 blocks, supraventricular arrhythmias, patients with renal failure (GFR below 30) or severe liver failure; patients with known acute or previous intracranial pathology and known diagnosis of epilepsy, predefined complex airway examination, patients who required more than one attempt at intubation or total laryngoscopy took more than 20 s. Patient randomization and blindness Randomization will be performed using a computer-based algorithm in a 1:1 ratio into five (n= 20) named Groups A, B, C, D, and E and sealed into opaque envelopes by the study's primary investigator. The anesthesiology technician will select an envelope in order of numbers written on it and prepare unlabeled saline infusions according to the predetermined protocols of each group. Each group will receive one of the protocols as lidocaine (1.5 mg/kg), dexmedetomidine (1 mcg/kg), esmolol (1 mcq/kg), and magnesium (20 mg/kg) prepared in 50 ml of unlabeled physiological saline, after standard monitoring on the operating room table. In the control group, only saline will be administered intravenously for 10 minutes; then, general anesthesia will be applied. Along with the study participants, the primary investigator (B.C.) will be blind to the study groups as the sole applier of the ONSD measurement and the only observer of the hemodynamic changes. All patients will receive standardized general anesthesia with 2 mg/kg propofol (Lipuro, Braun), 2 mcg/kg fentanyl (Talinat, VEM), 0,8 mg /kg rocuronium (Esmeron, Alessandroorsini) followed by 1 MAC sevoflurane (Sevorane, Abbott) in an air-oxygen mixture for maintenance of anesthesia with bi-spectral index monitorization (BIS, Medtronic). All endotracheal intubations will be done by practitioners with over two years of experience as anesthesiologists 2 min after the end of the rocuronium injection. The starting mechanical ventilator settings were volume-controlled ventilation with a positive end-expiratory pressure value of 5 mmHg for at least ten minutes. The primary investigator (B.C.) will measure ONSD at times: first after anesthesia induction before laryngoscopy, second just after laryngoscopy, third five minutes after, and fourth ten minutes after intubation by ultrasound guidance with a high-frequency linear probe at T2 ophthalmic preset. Concurrently, systolic and mean blood pressure, heart rate, BIS, and end-tidal carbon dioxide will be recorded with the addition of peak pressures after intubation. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06254534
Study type Interventional
Source Haseki Training and Research Hospital
Contact Berna Caliskan, MD
Phone +905067108770
Email caliskan.b@gmail.com
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date February 14, 2024
Completion date March 2024

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