Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00789412

Surgical Stress Index as a Tool for Monitoring Analgesia and/or Sedation in Critically Ill Patients

SSI for Monitoring of Analgesia and Sedation in Critically Ill Patients

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The hypothesis of the study is: Does the Surgical Stress Index (SSI) correlate with the Behavioral Pain Scale (BPS), the Ramsay Sedation Scale (RSS)and/or the Behavioral Pain Scale(BPV) and can therefore be used to monitor the quality of analgosedation in noncommunicative intensive care unit patients?

Detailed description

The Surgical Stress index (SSI) was developed as a bedside tool to measure 'pain' during surgery. First trials showed a good correlation between SSI and aching procedures and a negative correlation to the dosage of Remifentanil. The first evaluation studies were performed under Propofol and Remifentanil anaesthesia. A different site of use for the Surgical Stress Index could be the intensive care medicine. 'Analgesia and Sedation are essential elements of intensive care treatment and relevant for patient outcome... There is therefore a need to monitor and define the level of sedation and pain and to provide the critically ill patient with adequate analgesia and sedation.' (j. martin 2002). Although the Ramsey Sedation Scale was never proven for validity and reliability it is an often used score for measurement of sedation quality. (Ramsay 74, Hansen-Flaschen 94, Jacobi 02, Martin 04). The Behavioral Pain Scale showed , apart from systolic blood pressure and heart rate, to be reliable and valid for measuring pain in noncommunicative, mechanical ventilated intensive care unit patients. (Payen 01, Jacobi 02, Aissaoui 05) These scales need to be performed a few times a day to be up to date and therefore time consuming for the intensive care staff. The Surgical Stress Index could be a non-invasive, bedside and online tool for measurement of sedation and/or analgesia in this complex patient group.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2008-08-01
Primary completion
2009-08-01
Completion
2009-10-01
First posted
2008-11-11
Last updated
2009-10-28

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00789412. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.