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CompletedNCT03444545

Continous Cardiac Output - Non-Invasive Evaluation (CONNIE)

The Performance of a Capnodynamic Method Compared to Transpulmonary Thermodilution in Open Abdominal Surgery

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
35 (actual)
Sponsor
Karolinska Institutet · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The capnodynamic method non-invasively calculates effective pulmonary blood flow (EPBF) continuously during surgery. In this study EPBF is compared to cardiac output (CO) measured with Transpulmonary Thermodilution (TPTD) att baseline and during hemodynamic changes in patients scheduled for open abdominal surgery at the Karolinska University Hospital, Solna, Sweden.

Detailed description

The capnodynamic method continuously calculates effective pulmonary blood flow (EPBF) with the help of a capnodynamic equation: ELV x (FACO2(n) - FACO2(n-1)) = deltat(n) x EPBF (CvCO2 - CvCO2(n)) - VTCO2 ELV Effective lung volume \[L\] EPBF Effective pulmonary blood flow \[L/min\] n current breath n-1 previous breath FACO2 mean alveolar carbon dioxide fraction CvCO2 mixed venous carbon dioxide content \[Lgas/Lblood\] CcCO2n pulmonary end-capillary carbon dioxide content \[Lgas/Lblood\] VTCO2n volume \[L\] of carbon dioxide eliminated by the current, nth, breath delta t n current breath cycle time \[min\] The equation above describes the mole balance between the CO2 delivered to lungs (EPBF), the volume taking part in the gas exchange (ELV) and CO2 excreted from the lungs (VTCO2). Normally there is no difference in CO2 between the actual and the preceding breath as the same amount of CO2 as delivered to the lungs as is excreted. When small changes in CO2 concentration are inserted into the equation obtained with short inspiratory or expiratory pauses in three out of nine breaths, nine different equations are obtained. The three unknown variables; ELV, EPBF and CvCO2can be solved with a linear least square optimization, a well-known numerical mathematical principle. The breathing pattern is automatically controlled by the ventilator which provides continuous calculations of EPBF where each value represents the average of the preceding nine breaths and renews with each breath as the newest replaces the oldest in the equation system. At the day of surgery, included patients arrive 45 minutes earlier than otherwise at the surgical unit. After safe surgical checklist, vital signs are measured and epidural catheter inserted during a light sedation. Patients are anesthetized and muscle relaxed. An endotracheal tube is inserted in the trachea. Central arterial and vein catheters are inserted in sterile conditions with ultrasound guidance. Anesthesia is maintained with propofol in target controlled infusion and a short acting opioid is added as needed. The protocol in the first 25 patients comprises simultaneous measurements of EPBF and CO at 1) Baseline (three measurments), 2) PEEP 15cmH2O, 3) PEEP 5cmH2O 4) before epidural activation, 5) 10-15 minutes after epidural activation 6) before volume infusion (when the patient is considered hypovolemic by the attending anaesthesiologist) and 7) shortly after volume infusion. The attending anesthesiologist has the final responsibility on deciding the order of the protocol, for example if volume infusion should precede PEEP 15 cmH20 if hypovolemia is suspected. The succeeding 10 patients (patients 26 to 35) are PEEP optimized before start of protocol using a standardiazed open lung tool recruitment. During the PEEP elevation (step 2 in the protocol above) 10cmH2O is added to the optimal PEEP and then released back to the baseline optimal PEEP (step 3). Each comparative measurement of CO and EPBF in the protocol includes as an average of three TPTD measured with PiCCO2 and and the average of EPBF registered in the beginning of the first TPTD and in the end of the last TPTD.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICECapnodynamic methodExpired carbon dioxide is measured with a mainstream infrared sensor (Capnostat-3, Respironics Inc, Wallingford, CT, USA) and gas flow analysed with the flow sensor incorporated in the ventilator (Servo-i, Maquet Critical Care, Solna, Sweden) which was connected to a computer where all the mathematical analysis is carried out with a software written in Matlab™ (The Mathworks Inc, Natick, MA, USA). Instead of a fixed ratio between inspiration and expiration, three breaths out of every nine are prolonged with a 3-4 seconds longer expiration creating small changes in end- expiratory CO2
DEVICETranspulmonary thermodilutionEach cardiac output measurement comprises an average of three thermodilutions performed successively one after another. TPTD is performed with a PiCCO2 monitor (Pulsion Medical Systems SE, Feldkirchen, Germany)

Timeline

Start date
2015-10-29
Primary completion
2018-09-28
Completion
2018-12-31
First posted
2018-02-23
Last updated
2019-01-11

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Sweden

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03444545. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.