Acute Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema Clinical Trial
Official title:
Randomised Controlled Comparison of Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) With Standard Treatment in Out-of-hospital Patients With Acute Cardiogenic Pulmonary Edema.
Evaluate efficacy and safety of CPAP in a randomised standard treatment controlled study, in out-of-hospital patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema.
Acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema is a frequent medical emergency. Several studies have
shown that continuous positive airway pressure is effective in acute cardiogenic pulmonary
edema, through improvement in gas exchange, reduction in intubation rate and a trend towards
reduced mortality. CPAP is usually obtained with a hermetic nasal or facemask witch has an
expiratory valve to maintain a positive pressure at the end of the expiration. With this
support, the patient does not receive any assistance with respiration.
The available data about CPAP concern patients hospitalised in cardiology intensive care
units, in resuscitation areas or in emergency departments.
We will undertake a controlled prospective randomised trial to investigate whether the early
use of CPAP would improve oxygenation and survival, as compared with standard medical
therapy in patients with acute cardiogenic pulmonary edema.
This study will include 124 patients over 18 years of age, suffering of acute cardiogenic
pulmonary edema, with a respiratory rate greater than 25 bpm and oxygen saturation less than
90 %. The patients will be include just after the beginning of the episode, in prehospital
mobile intensive car unit (SAMU) and will be all admitted in resuscitation area in a central
hospital. They will be randomly assigned to CPAP or conventional oxygen therapy. The
randomisation sequence is generated by the random numbers table. Closed envelopes containing
the allocated treatment will be stored in the emergency department and will be opened when
the patient is included.
Oxygen saturation (by pulse-oxymetry), heart rate, respiratory rate, dyspnea, blood pressure
will be measured every 15 min during the transport to the intensive care unit and every
hour. The blood gazes will be measured at the arrival. The intubation rate, the duration of
the hospitalisation and the mortality in the thirty days following initial treatment will be
noted.
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