View clinical trials related to Sedation Complication.
Filter by:Hypoxemia was defined as an SpO2 of < 90% for any duration. Failure to treat promptly can lead to hypoxemia, which may increase the risks of arrhythmia, nausea and vomiting, and cognitive dysfunction. Studies have shown that body position has a direct impact on respiratory function. In special environments, including outside the operating room where emergency airway management for critically ill and injured patients is needed, or in areas with limited medical resources like remote areas, adopting simple interventions by changing position to maintain patients' respiratory function can be more economical, convenient and safe.
Investigators will include in our study patients aged 60 and over who have been evaluated in the pre-anesthesia clinic for procedures such as endoscopy, colonoscopy, ERCP, PEG, EUS, and ESD, and who have received sedation by an anesthesiologist. Patients will be assessed for frailty prior to the procedure; during and after the procedure, respiratory monitoring (SpO2, capnography) will be closely observed, and they will be contacted by phone three days later. Primary goal of the study is to prospectively investigate the incidence of peri-procedural complications (desaturation, bradycardia, hypotension, etc.) in elderly patients undergoing gastrointestinal procedural sedation, and to assess its relationship with detected frailty using the FRAIL scale.Secondary goals of the study are to identify risk factors for adverse events, examine the relationship of these factors with 'ASA score - age and frailty scale', and determine their impact on the incidence of adverse events. Additionally, investigators aim to research the effects of capnography-based respiratory monitoring on adverse events.
The goal of this four-part preclinical [I-II] and clinical [III-IV] trial is to compare, with randomised crossover study design [I-IV], a new medical airway device with standard procedure (biteblock or no device) for upper airway patency during sedation with intravenous propofol [I-IV]. - Page 1 of 9 [DRAFT] - The two main questions it aims to answer are if this new airway device is superior to standard procedure with respect to - maintenance of spontaneous ventilation [I] and upper airway volumes [II] at moderate and deep steady-state levels of sedation in healthy volunteer study participants, and - fewer and less lasting bedside signs of respiratory depression [III-IV], and less adjuvant use of manual airway support [III-IV] during procedural sedation (PS) according to standard of care(SOC) in study patients scheduled for colonoscopy or ureteral catheterisation under PS. Owing to the crossover study design used throughout the trial, there are no comparison groups of study participants [I-II] or study patients [III-IV].
In recent years, out patient anesthesia applications have been increasing for diagnostic and interventional procedures for pediatric patients. In this study, we aimed to retrospectively analyze the anesthesia applications performed in pediatric MRI cases in our hospital. It is a retrospective study
Many questions about management of COVID-19 are still not answered. So, we recruit this study aiming to evaluate improvement of oxygenation in COVID-19 patients with severe ARDS, to improve morbidity and mortality of ICU covid patients, to participate in understanding of real hidden pathophysiology of COVID-19.