Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01101139

Sugammadex Improves Muscle Function After Standard Neuromuscular Recovery

Small Dose of Sugammadex Improves Muscle Function After Standard Neuromuscular Recovery (TOF 0.9)

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
300 (actual)
Sponsor
Technical University of Munich · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is designed to investigate, whether Sugammadex improves muscle function after standard neuromuscular recovery (TOF 0.9) from relaxation with rocuronium.

Detailed description

Muscle relaxants are an integral part of today's anesthesia. They improve intubating conditions and reduce doses of other substances needed for general anesthesia. For ensuring patient safety, neuromuscular function is monitored during general anesthesia. The latter one is only terminated, when neuromuscular monitoring shows an objective normal value. Despite this accurate surveillance, a lot of patients complain about subjectively uncomfortable muscle weakness in the recovery room. A possible explanation for this ostensive contradiction can be the variable "margin of safety" of neuromuscluar transmission in different muscle groups. Waud et al describe this phenomenon, as the fact, that neuromuscular transmission is only clinically detectable, when a certain number of post-synaptic receptors is not blocked. The necessary fraction of free receptors differs a lot between the muscle groups (15-50%). As neuromuscular monitoring only measures one muscle group exemplarily, and a clinically non-detectable number of post-synaptic receptors can be blocked shortly after anesthesia, the subjective muscle weakness of patients could need treatment. Sugammadex can encapsulate steroid-typ muscle relaxants within 2 to 5 minutes. After applying a sufficiently high dose, also those receptors will be free that elude neuromuscular monitoring. This constellation brings up the interesting problem to quantify the possible effect on patients' subjective muscle weakness. This study is designed to investigate, if the application of sugammadex improves muscle function and consequently well-being of patients, that have been extubated according to clinical standard.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGSugammadexSugammadex (single intravenous injection 0.25 mg/kg)
DRUGPlaceboPlacebo: single intravenous injection Saline 0.9%

Timeline

Start date
2010-04-01
Primary completion
2011-05-01
Completion
2011-06-01
First posted
2010-04-09
Last updated
2012-12-17

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Germany

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01101139. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.