Septic Shock Clinical Trial
Official title:
Adjunctive Esketamine for Analgesia in Mechanically Ventilated ICU Septic Shock Patients
Sedation and analgesia in patients with sepsis and hemodynamic instability may be challenging in the ICU. Opioids and propofol can further exacerbate tissue infusion in septic shock by reducing cardiac contractility, increasing vasodilation, and reducing respiratory drive. Ketamine is an NMDA receptor antagonist, which has no effect on respiratory drive and has diastolic airway smooth muscle and anti-inflammatory properties. Esketamine is a dextrorotatory cleavage twice as potent and reduces the incidence of dose-dependent side effects of ketamine. Although it has been successfully used in burn patients undergoing multiple operations and anesthesia-related maintenance analgesia, it has not been reported in ICU septic shock patients undergoing mechanical ventilation. The purpose of this study was to explore the use of esketamine in mechanically ventilated ICU septic shock patients in a single-center randomized controlled trial.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 124 |
Est. completion date | October 31, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | October 31, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Age = 18; - A patient diagnosed with septic shock; - It needs to be treated with analgesics, sedatives, and vasopressors for a period of not less than 48 hours; - Mechanical ventilation by the ventilator is needed; - Obtain the informed consent of the human subjects or their legal representatives; Exclusion Criteria: - Currently pregnant or breastfeeding; - Confirmed acute severe intracranial or spinal neurologic diseases caused by vascular, intracranial expansion, or injury; - History of uncontrolled or malignant hypertension (sustained (>3 hours) heart rate >150 beats/min or systolic blood pressure >180 mmHg); recent history of ketamine use; - Hearing or vision loss, or any other conditions likely to severely interfere with the collection of research data; - Long-term use of benzodiazepines or opioids; - Known allergy to any investigational drug; - Subject receiving sedative therapy not for tolerance to mechanical ventilation (e.g., seizures); - Unlikely to require ongoing sedation during mechanical ventilation (e.g., Guillain-Barré syndrome); - Patients deemed unlikely by the attending physician to be weaned from mechanical ventilation, such as those with diseases/injuries primarily affecting respiratory neuromuscular function and conditions requiring prolonged ventilatory support, which are clearly irreversible (e.g., high spinal cord injury); - Open eye injury or other ophthalmic diseases; - Concurrent participation in any other interventional study (any study assigning subjects to different treatment groups and/or conducting unconventional diagnostic or monitoring procedures). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
China | Southern medical university Nanfang hospital | Guangzhou |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Nanfang Hospital, Southern Medical University |
China,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Doses of remifentanil and norepinephrine during mechanical ventilation (total dose/duration of use hours). | Responsible researchers consult the patient's medical record after completing treatment to obtain the dosage and duration of medication. | During mechanical ventilation procedure (From randomization to the seventh day of infusion or ventilator withdrawal, whichever occurs first) | |
Secondary | Duration of mechanical ventilation. | Responsible researchers obtain information by viewing electronic medical records. | From endotracheal intubation to withdrawal from mechanical ventilation, or until 28 days after discharge, death, or randomization in the ICU, whichever occurs | |
Secondary | Mechanical ventilator free days. | Responsible researchers obtain information by viewing electronic medical records. | Days to 28 | |
Secondary | Propofol dosage (total dose/duration of use) during mechanical ventilation. | Responsible researchers consult the patient's medical record after completing treatment to obtain the dosage and duration of medication. | During mechanical ventilation procedure (From randomization to the seventh day of infusion or ventilator withdrawal, whichever occurs first) | |
Secondary | The proportion of patients meeting the RASS sedation and CPOT pain goals during mechanical ventilation. | Professionally trained researchers perform RASS and COPT scores on patients at specific time points. | up to 28 days | |
Secondary | The incidence of delirium, i.e. the positive rate of CAM-ICU. | The occurrence of delirium in patients will be recorded by clinicians or nurses on medical records, and researchers will summarize the occurrence of delirium (such as the time of occurrence, duration, treatment measures, etc.)Patients will be evaluated using CAM-ICU by clinicians or nurses. | up to 28 days | |
Secondary | Incidence of adverse events. | The occurrence of adverse events during the hospital period will be recorded in the medical record by the clinician or nurse, and the researcher will obtain the occurrence of adverse events (event type, time, treatment, results, etc.) through the medical record. | up to 28 days | |
Secondary | Length of ICU stay. | Researchers obtain it through the hospital electronic system. | up to 28 days | |
Secondary | The mortality rate | Researchers obtain it through the hospital electronic system. | up to 28 days |
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