Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03435523

The Open Lung Approach During One Lung Ventilation in Thoracic Surgery

Optimal PEEP Based on the Open Lung Approach During One Lung Ventilation in Thoracic Surgery: a Physiological Study.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
24 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Foggia · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

* Question: Ventilatory strategy to counterbalance the effect of one lung ventilation during thoracic surgery. * Findings: the open lung approach improved oxygenation and lung compliance, reducing respiratory system driving pressure and transpulmonary driving pressure. * Meaning: patients undergoing thoracic surgery during one lung ventilation may benefit of an open lung approach strategy to avoid ventilator lung injury.

Detailed description

Background: During thoracic surgery in lateral decubitus, one lung ventilation (OLV) may impair respiratory mechanics and gas exchange. The investigators tested a strategy based on an open lung approach (OLA) consisting in lung recruitment immediately followed by a decremental positive-end expiratory pressure (PEEP) titration to the best respiratory system compliance (CRS) and separately quantified the elastic properties of the lung and the chest wall. The investigators hypothesis was that this approach would improve gas exchange and increase lung compliance (CL). Methods: In thirteen patients undergoing upper left lobectomy the investigators studied lung and chest wall mechanics, transpulmonary pressure (PL), respiratory system and transpulmonary driving pressure (ΔPRS and ΔPL), gas exchange and hemodynamics at two time-points (a) during OLV at zero end-expiratory pressure (OLVpre-OLA) and (b) after the application of the open-lung strategy (OLVpost-OLA).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERecruitment maneuverthe ventilator was switched to pressure-control ventilation with a driving pressure of 20 cmH2O. After a 3 min equilibration, PEEP was applied in steps of 5,10,15 and 20 cmH2O every five respiratory breaths; subsequently, after setting a driving pressure of 15 cmH2O, PEEP was stepwise reduced, starting from 15 cmH2O, by 2 cmH2O every 2 minutes. The recruiting pressure of 20/20 was applied for six breaths. During the decremental PEEP trial, CRS was measured at every step. The PEEP level corresponding to highest CRS during the decremental trial was identified as the "best PEEP". Subsequently, the lungs were recruited again and the "best" PEEP was applied.

Timeline

Start date
2012-02-01
Primary completion
2012-11-30
Completion
2012-11-30
First posted
2018-02-19
Last updated
2018-02-19

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03435523. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.