Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT02477501

Ephedrine vs. Nor Epinephrine Infusion in Preventing Hypotension After Spinal Anesthesia for Cesarean Section

Ephedrine vs. Nor-epinephrine Infusion in Preventing Hypotension After Spinal Anesthesia for Cesarean Section

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
120 (actual)
Sponsor
University Tunis El Manar · Academic / Other
Sex
Female
Age
18 Years – 45 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The purpose of the study is to determine if norepinephrine is more effective as a continuous intravenous (IV) infusion compared to continuous IV ephedrine associated with crystalloid loading for maintaining blood pressure during a spinal anesthetic for a cesarean delivery. Prevention of low blood pressure has been shown to decrease nausea and vomiting during and after cesarean delivery under spinal anesthesia. For elective cesarean delivery, all participants will receive spinal anesthesia with a local anesthetic and morphine. This study plans to enroll 120 pregnant women. Patients will be randomly assigned according to a computer generated system to be in one of two groups.

Detailed description

This study will be a prospective, randomized, active treatment controlled trial. After written and informed consent are obtained, the study participants are randomly assigned using a computer generated table to 1 of 2 treatment groups prior to cesarean delivery. Group A will consist of: A continuous Ephedrine infusion 10 mcg/kg/min to maintain systolic blood pressure (SBP) within 80-120% of baseline before the spinal. Group B will consist of: A continuous norepinephrine infusion 0.1 mcg/kg/min to maintain systolic blood pressure (SBP) within 80-120% of baseline before the spinal. Patients will be admitted to holding area. Baseline arterial blood pressure and heart rate will be measured in supine position, with left uterine displacement. Baseline blood pressure will be calculated by taking the mean of three consecutive SBP measurements taken 5 minutes apart. 500 mL of Lactated Ringers solution will be administered immediately after induction of spinal anesthesia at the outflow rate of 100ml per hour. The primary endpoint is the number of provider interventions needed to maintain the SBP within 100-120% of baseline for both groups. The secondary endpoint is nausea measured with each provider intervention after induction of spinal anesthesia, and immediately following delivery with 11 point verbal rating scale (0 = no nausea, 1 = nausea). Vomiting will be recorded whenever present during the surgical procedure. Hypertensive episodes (SBP greater than 120% of baseline) will be treated with cessation of infusion. Infusion will be restarted when SBP has decreased to below the baseline SBP). If the infusion must be stopped on three occasions, it will be discontinued permanently and the blood pressure maintained with Ephedrine boluses only when needed. Bradycardia (HR less than 50 BPM) will be treated with Atropine 0.4mg IV or ephedrine 3 mg - 12 mg IV bolus. Study participants will receive a standard spinal anesthetic consisting of 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine (2 mL) plus preservative free morphine (0.1 mg) and sufentanil (5 mcg) at L3-4 or L4-5. Prior to surgical incision, the spinal sensory level will be tested to the bilateral T6-T4 dermatomal level. The patients will be positioned supine with a wedge placed under the right hip to avoid aortocaval compression. Both the patient and the researcher's assistant (who will collect data) will be blinded as to the administered Ephedrine infusion or norepinephrine infusion. The study will end when cesarean section is completed and the patient transferred to the post-operative care unit. Measured variables will include systolic, diastolic and mean non-invasive blood pressure, the number and type of interventions for control of blood pressure, heart rate, incidedence of nausea and vomiting (NV), incidence of arrhythmia and fetal cord blood analysis (pH) at delivery.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGNorepinephrinecontinuous infusion
DRUGEphedrinecontinuous infusion

Timeline

Start date
2016-01-01
Primary completion
2016-11-01
Completion
2016-12-01
First posted
2015-06-22
Last updated
2017-10-26

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Tunisia

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02477501. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.