Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04713644

Association Between Burst Suppression During Anesthetic Induction With Postoperative Delirium in Cardiac Surgery

Study of the Association Between Burst Suppression During Anesthetic Induction With Propofol in Cardiac Surgery in Patients Over 65 Years of Age With Postoperative Delirium

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
78 (actual)
Sponsor
Pontificia Universidad Catolica de Chile · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
65 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The population over 65 years of age will be increasingly exposed to surgical procedures that require general anesthesia. Postoperative delirium is one of the main causes of preventable postoperative morbidity in the elderly population and is a frequent event after cardiac surgery with extracorporeal circulation. The excess administration of anesthetics that potentiate the Gamma Aminobutyric A receptor, such as propofol, are related to an intraoperative electroencephalographic pattern called burst suppression that has been associated with postoperative delirium. It is unknown whether this pattern is secondary to a relative overdose of anesthetics or rather corresponds to a characteristic of a vulnerable brain that is suppressed at doses at which other patients are not. Our objective will be to determine whether burst suppression in people over 65 years of age during a standardized anesthetic induction with propofol for cardiac surgery with extracorporeal circulation is associated with postoperative delirium compared to older people who do not present it.

Detailed description

Perioperative neurocognitive disorders, including postoperative delirium (POD), are the leading cause of preventable postoperative morbidity in the elderly population. POD is an acute brain dysfunction characterized by changes in attention and cognition usually within of the first week after surgery and anesthesia. Its appearance triggers a series of events that often end in loss of independence, increased morbidity and mortality and increased health costs. It has been associated with the development of long-term cognitive impairment, including persistent dementia. Its nature is multifactorial and its pathophysiology is not yet fully elucidated. Over administration of anesthetics that potentiate the Gamma Amino Butyric A (GABAA) receptor, such as barbiturates or propofol, is related to an intraoperative electroencephalographic (EEG) pattern called burst suppression that has been associated with POD. It is a common event after cardiac surgery with an incidence ranging from 15% to 50%. Given its adverse impact on functioning and quality of life, delirium has enormous social implications for the individual, family, community, and health care systems. Burst suppression is a pattern observed in the EEG characterized by quasi-periodic alternations between isoelectricity (flat EEG) and brief bursts of electrical activity such as spikes, sharp waves, or slow waves. It reflects a brain state of relative cortical inactivity that is not observed during normal waking states or sleeping behaviors. This pattern can be observed associated with coma due to diffuse anoxic damage, induced hypothermia and Ohtahara syndrome epilepsy. In addition, the administration of high-dose anesthetics that potentiate the GABAA receptor produce burst suppression followed by isoelectricity. Burst suppression during maintenance of general anesthesia with anesthetics that enhance the GABAA receptor has previously been associated with POD. When propofol is administered as a bolus during anesthetic induction, older patients, can suffer burst suppression in seconds. However, it is unknown whether this pattern is secondary to a relative overdose of anesthetics or rather corresponds to a characteristic of the vulnerable brain that is suppressed at doses to which other patients do not present this pattern. At present, it is not known whether burst suppression is a modifiable risk factor for POD or an epiphenomenon or marker of other factors that cause POD. A randomized controlled clinical trial studied an EEG-guided anesthetic protocol that reduced the administration of anesthetic, diminished the incidence of burts suppression during the intraoperative period, but not the incidence of POD. Therefore, the association between bursts suppression induced by anesthetics and POD appears not to be causal.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGStandardized Propofol AdministrationIntravenous bolus propofol administration of 0.5 mg/Kg dose, plus 0.5 mg/Kg extra if necessary

Timeline

Start date
2021-03-01
Primary completion
2024-02-28
Completion
2024-09-01
First posted
2021-01-19
Last updated
2025-05-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Chile

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04713644. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.