View clinical trials related to Preoxygenation.
Filter by:Airway management is crucial part of the anaesthesia. There is always a considerable risk of complications or even failure during the anaesthesia induction and airway management. The risk could be greater considering anaesthesia in children and neonates because of their anatomical and physiological differences. Children and neonates are more susceptible to hypoxia and bradycardia during induction of anaesthesia, this risk is even greater during the rapid sequence induction/intubation (RSI), in which there is an apnoeic pause because of the absence of manual ventilation. Because of the pause it is necessary to provide enough oxygen in advance during preoxygenation. The aim of this trial is to compare providing oxygen by face-mask and by high-flow nasal oxygen cannula. Another outcome is to evalute the safety profile RSI in children and neonates.
The study assumed that supraglottic jet ventilation is an alternative solution as a safe way to do the preoxygenation before endotracheal intubation by contrasting it with mask pressurized ventilation. The investigators also expected that supraglottic jet ventilation won't increase the occurrence of esophageal reflux.
Preoxygenation prior to general anaesthesia prolongs safe apnea time. Proper preoxygenation is always a challenge in emergency surgery. The aim of our study is to estimate problems encountered during preoxygenation, their risk factors and ways of solving them.
Rationale of the study: we aim to clarify the question (related to still unclear and not univocal response) about the protective or unnecessary role of preoxygenation in non-critically ill patients (otherwise with no high risk of desaturation) undergoing general anesthesia before elective surgery. It will be also necessary differentiate the development of postoperative complications (pulmonary, cardiovascular, neurological, surgical) due to preoxygenation from the ones related with patient comorbidity, intraoperative and surgical causes, tube disconnection. Procedure: patient's informed consent signature for adhesion at the study will be initially requested. With their acceptance, parameters will be recorded anonymously in the Case Report Form, identified by their initials and an alphanumeric code, until hospital discharge. The parameters analyzed will be related to: - preoperative evaluation; about anamnesis, health general conditions, blood oxygen saturation (Sat02), Metabolic Equivalent of Task (METs) - intraoperative evaluation; about oxygenations values, recorded before/during induction and maintenance of general anesthesia - postoperative evaluation; about postoperative complications, pulmonary primarily, and secondary cardiovascular, neurological and surgical, based on the medical record. The data wil be transferred on Excel worksheet, utilized for descriptive analysis related at every variable. By multivariate logistic regression will be evaluated the major factors influencing postoperative pulmonary complications (PPCs) onset in patients undergoing preoxygenation for elective surgery