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Clinical Trial Summary

The ability to assess intravascular volume is an essential part of perioperative care: insufficient intravascular volume can result in decreased oxygen delivery to tissues and organ dysfunction, while fluid overload can contribute to the development of oedema, organ dysfunction, respiratory failure and healing defect. At the present state, there are many different methods of interpreting intravascular circulating blood volume. Non-invasive techniques such as the Clear Sight System, and the transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) have been proposed as non-invasive methods to assess patient' blood volume. The aim of this study is to assess whether the measure of the inferior vena cava (IVC) in the trans-hepatic window is as reliable as in the subcostal window to determine fluid responsiveness in perioperative patients. In this study, preload increase will be obtained through passive leg raising. Sensibility and specificity of the two echocardiographic approaches to predict fluid responsiveness will be compared while using the subcostal window as the "gold standard". The effect of passive leg elevation on patient's cardiac output response will be assessed with two different non-invasive techniques: the Clear Sight system and the TTE.


Clinical Trial Description

The ability to assess intravascular volume is an essential part of perioperative care: insufficient intravascular volume can result in decreased oxygen delivery to tissues and organ dysfunction, while fluid overload can contribute to the development of oedema, organ dysfunction, respiratory failure and healing defect. Assessment of the volume status in perioperative patients relies on two important concepts: euvolemia and fluid responsiveness. Euvolemia describes a state of adequate circulating blood volume that allows suitable filling of the cardiac chambers making possible for the heart to produce a cardiac output that meets the peripheral oxygen demand. Fluid responsiveness describes the ability of the heart to adapt blood flow in response to preload increase. As euvolemia is the ultimate goal of fluid administration then evaluating fluid responsiveness reflects the process of working toward establishing euvolemia. At the present state, there are many different methods of interpreting intravascular circulating blood volume: those related to pressures measurements: the central venous pressure (CVP), the pulmonary artery occluded pressure (PAOP), and those related to cardiac output measurements like thermodilution and pulse contour techniques. It is worth noting that all these are invasive methods that expose patients to a series of possible side effects such as: pneumothorax, infections, hematomas and vascular lesions. Non-invasive techniques such as the Clear Sight System, and the transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE) have been proposed as non-invasive methods to assess patient' blood volume. TTE is a widely used and validated imaging technique which involves the study of the heart and great vessels through multiple examination windows. In particular, the subcostal window represents the gold standard for evaluating the diameter of the inferior vena cava (IVC) and its compliance, allowing the physician to obtain valuable information on the volume status of patients: several studies have reported that these measurements could predict accurately the hemodynamic response of patient to a change in cardiac preload. However, acquiring images in the subcostal window can be, in some cases, difficult or impossible due to the presence of drainages or surgical wounds; in such cases an alternative could be represented by the trans-hepatic window which, at the best of the investigator's knowledge, it has never been validated in the literature. The Clear Sight System is a non-invasive blood pressure (BP) monitoring system, where the CO is determined analysing the photo-plethysmography curve by a miniaturized pressure cuff and infrared LEDs. Its main advantage is to assess CO continuously in a completely non-invasive way, following its variations and thereby contributing to the detection of hypovolaemia. Other visualized parameters are: the stroke volume (SV), the systemic vascular resistance (SVR) as well as the BP and the heart rate (HR). Passive leg raising (PLR) is a test developed to predict patient's hemodynamic response to increase preload without any fluid administration. Raising the patient from a semi-recumbent position to a position with the head at 0° and the legs raised to a 45° angle is associated with about 300 ml of blood volume mobilization from the lower limbs and splanchnic territory to the central compartment resulting in increased venous return to the heart. This manoeuvre provokes a preload increase to which patients could respond with (responder) or without (non-responders) an augmentation of their cardiac output. The aim of this study is to assess whether the measure of the IVC in the trans-hepatic window is as reliable as in the subcostal window to determine fluid responsiveness in perioperative patients. In this study, preload increase will be obtained through passive leg raising. Sensibility and specificity of the two echocardiographic approaches to predict fluid responsiveness will be compared while using the subcostal window as the "gold standard". The effect of passive leg elevation on patient's cardiac output response will be assessed with two different non-invasive techniques: the Clear Sight system and the TTE. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04866095
Study type Interventional
Source Brugmann University Hospital
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date June 25, 2021
Completion date November 9, 2021

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