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Remimazolam clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT05533567 Recruiting - General Anesthesia Clinical Trials

Electroencephalographic Profiles During General Anesthesia: a Comparative Study of Remimazolam and Propofol

Start date: October 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

How anesthetic drugs induce and maintain the behavioral state of general anesthesia is an important question in medicine and neuroscience. Different anesthetic drugs act on different molecular targets and neural circuit mechanisms, exhibiting drug-specific EEG features. As a novel ultra-short-acting benzodiazepines drugs, remimazolam has been accepted for induction and maintenance of clinical anesthesia. Compared to the traditional benzodiazepines drugs, remimazolam combines the safety of midazolam with the effectiveness of propofol, and also has the advantages of acting quickly, short half-life, no injection pain, slight respiratory depression, independent of liver and kidney metabolism, long-term infusion without accumulation, and has a specific antagonist: flumazenil. This study aimed to investigate the differences in the characteristics of EEG oscillations during general anesthesia by comparing propofol and remimazolam.

NCT ID: NCT05437497 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Sedation Complication

Safety and Efficacy Evaluation of Remimazolam for Endoscopic Ultrasound-guided Fine Needle Aspiration/Biopsy

Start date: August 1, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to compare the safety and efficacy of remimazolam and propofol in EUS-FNA/FNB sedation. This study is a prospective, single-blind study. We plan to enroll 264 patients undergoing EUS-FNA and divide them into two groups. The experimental group was sedated with remimazolam, and the control group was sedated with propofol; safety and efficacy parameters such as intraoperative blood pressure, finger pulse oxygen, heart rate and sedation success rate would be compared. We hypothesized that patients in the experimental group would be superior in terms of safety parameters; the two would be equal in terms of sedation success.