Anesthesia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Assessment of Oxygenation Values Before General Anesthesia in Elective Surgery
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
Background of the study:
Preoxygenation is a widely used technique that improves the safety of endotracheal
intubation. The procedure is carried out by supplying 100% oxygen (FiO2 of 1.0) before the
induction of general anesthesia until both end-tidal oxygen (EtO2)>90% and end-tidal N2
(EtN2)<5% are reached. Both these markers define the efficacy of the procedure. As a result,
the lung oxygen content is increased far beyond normal oxygen consumption by saturating the
functional residual capacity with 100% oxygen. This allows for a longer safe apnea time (i.e.
the time required for oxyhemoglobin saturation to drop below 90%). The rate at which
oxyhemoglobin saturation drops during apnea indicates the efficiency of the maneuver.
This procedure is strongly recommended for all patients undergoing general anesthesia since
it lengthens safe laryngoscopy time and grants a wider timeframe to respond to a "cannot
intubate/cannot oxygenate" (CICO) scenario, a rare yet life threatening situation. It remains
unclear whether this should be considered mandatory for non-critically ill and non-obese
patients since their oxygen reserves should suffice for the time required to perform
endotracheal intubation or regain spontaneous breathing in the event of a CICO scenario.
Nonetheless, the guidelines for the management of endotracheal intubation, proposed by the
Difficult Airway Society in 2015 United Kingdom state how it is pivotal to preoxygenate every
patient before attempting to intubate. Several methods of preoxygenation have been validated
and compared according to duration of safe apnea time, duration of the procedure, success
rate (defined as "avoiding manual re-ventilation"), and patient tolerance. The choice between
these techniques is based on patient characteristics (age, sex, Body Mass Index, American
Society of Anesthesiologist score, Cormack-Lehane grade and Glasgow Coma Scale), settings
(e.g., operating room, Intensive Care Unit, emergency situations), equipment, and
anesthesiologist's preferences. The two standard approaches are six deep breaths in 1 min and
tidal volume breathing for three to 5 min, both at 100% inspired oxygen via a face mask.
The main side effect of preoxygenation is absorption atelectasis that occurs when delivering
100% inspired oxygen. This can be avoided using a lower inspired oxygen concentration (90%),
positive pressure techniques, and/or recruitment maneuvers post-endotracheal intubation. Due
to the short duration of the procedure, the production of reactive oxygen species and
cardiovascular responses are minimal and should not prevent routine preoxygenation.
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