Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00474071

Optimum Dose of Remifentanil for Intubation in Small Children

Investigation to Determine the Optimum Dose of Remifentanil for Tracheal Intubation in Children Using the Up/Down Method

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of British Columbia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
3 Weeks
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The routine medications to relax the muscles of the throat are an anesthetic drug, propofol, in combination with an ultra short acting pain medicine, remifentanil. Remifentanil is used to reduce the amount of propofol required but also to decrease the natural cough reflex to the breathing tube being inserted.The purpose of this study is to find the dose of remifentanil when combined with propofol which provides the best conditions for intubation without cough in infants and small children.Younger children may need higher doses of Remifentanil to facilitate intubation as they are more tolerant to the respiratory depressant effect of Remifentanil.

Detailed description

The introduction of propofol and short acting opioids has allowed intubation without the use of NMBA to become routine practice. The combination of an opioid and propofol reduces laryngeal reflexes and decreases pressor response to intubation. Identification of the optimum dose combination and sequence of remifentanil-propofol for intubation would allow clinicians to abandon the use of non depolarizing muscle relaxants.Younger children may need higher doses of Remifentanil to facilitate intubation as they are more tolerant to the respiratory depressant effect of Remifentanil. The Remifentanil dose will be prepared in a standard fashion by an anesthesiologist not directly involved in the study from the data given to them by a research assistant. The anesthesiologists performing laryngoscopy will be one of the four investigators. There will be a standard starting dose, which must be as close to the population mean as possible. All subjects will receive a minimum dose of 1µg/kg remifentanil which has been shown to produce acceptable intubating conditions. The dose of remifentanil for the following subject in each group will be determined from the dose used in the previous subject and response to intubation using an" up and down" sequential-allocation technique described by Dixon. The mean remifentanil intubation dose will be obtained by calculating the midpoint concentration of all independent pairs of patients involving a crossover (ie. Intubation scores all1 to intubation scores not all 1). Mean remifentanil intubation dose would be the average of the crossover midpoints in each subgroup. In addition the standard deviation of remifentanil dose will be the standard deviation of the crossover midpoints in each group. Patient demographics (age/sex/weight), and time to return of spontaneous ventilation will be expressed as mean +/- standard deviation. The inter-group comparisons will be performed using analysis of variance with a difference of 0.5 µg/kg considered to be significant and a p\<0.05 considered statistically significant.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGRemifentanilSee Detailed Description.

Timeline

Start date
2007-03-01
Primary completion
2008-04-01
Completion
2008-04-01
First posted
2007-05-16
Last updated
2008-09-25

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00474071. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.