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CompletedNCT02755389

Apneic Oxygenation Via Nasal Cannulae: 15 L/Min vs High-Flow

Status
Completed
Phase
Phase 4
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
45 (actual)
Sponsor
Nova Scotia Health Authority · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 70 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This is a randomized clinical trial investigating the utility of apneic oxygenation via nasal cannulae in the post-induction setting for the purpose of prolonging the safe apneic time. Three groups will be compared, a control group at 0 L/min, a 15 L/min and a 60 L/min group. The primary outcome will be the difference in the partial pressure of oxygen in arterial blood (PaO2) between groups throughout the nine-minute apneic period.

Detailed description

Airway management can be a life saving therapy. One major complication that may occur during airway management is a lack of oxygen in the blood. If severe or prolonged, this lack of oxygen can result in permanent brain damage, damage to other vital organs or even death. Strategies already exist to help prevent a lack of oxygen in the blood (hypoxemia), however research involving new ways to oxygenate patients may help to minimize the chance of hypoxemia during airway management. Apneic oxygenation is a novel method of delivering oxygen to a patient despite a lack of active respiration (i.e. the patient is not breathing on their own and the investigators are not providing the patient an artificial breath). The simplest and least invasive method to provide apneic oxygenation is the application of oxygen through nasal cannulae during airway management. Several different techniques to provide apneic oxygenation via nasal cannulae have been previously described(1-3), however randomized trials comparing these methods do not exist. This study will examine the change over time of the amount of oxygen dissolved in the blood (PaO2) in each of the three treatment groups: a control group (no apneic oxygenation), a 15 L/min group and a 60 L/min group. This data will help to determine the extent of benefit apneic oxygenation provides in this setting.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUG0 L/min oxygen via conventional nasal cannulaePatients will have conventional nasal cannulae placed under chin prior to induction of anesthesia. Immediately post-induction these will be placed into the nares. They will be removed from the nares at the end of the study when the airway has been secured. There will be no oxygen flowing through the cannulae in this group during the study.
DRUG15 L/min oxygen via conventional nasal cannulaePatients will have conventional nasal cannulae placed under chin prior to induction of anesthesia. Immediately post-induction these will be placed into the nares. They will be removed from the nares at the end of the study when the airway has been secured. There will be 15 L/min of oxygen flowing through the cannulae in this group during the study.
DRUG60 L/min oxygen via high-flow nasal cannulaePatients will have high-flow nasal cannulae placed under chin prior to induction of anesthesia. Immediately post-induction these will be placed into the nares. They will be removed from the nares at the end of the study when the airway has been secured. There will be 60 L/min of oxygen flowing through the cannulae in this group during the study.

Timeline

Start date
2016-09-01
Primary completion
2018-06-22
Completion
2018-06-22
First posted
2016-04-28
Last updated
2018-06-27

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02755389. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.