Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05696288

Conventional Oxygen Therapy Versus Continuous Transnasal High Flow Oxygen Therapy for Head and Neck Diagnostic Panendoscopy Under General Anesthesia in Spontaneous Ventilation

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
160 (actual)
Sponsor
Centre Antoine Lacassagne · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

The high-flow oxygen therapy system, also called the THRIVE (Transnasal Humidified Rapid-Insufflation Ventilatory Exchange) system, appears to provide better patient safety than conventional techniques. Panendoscopy is a very common diagnostic procedure in ENT surgery. The general anesthesia during the diagnostic panendoscopy is a good representation of the induction stage. Indeed, the procedure of preoxygenation preceding anesthetic induction and direct laryngoscopy corresponds to the airway management that is an integral part of each general anesthesia. This is why researchers are studying it in particular to improve patient safety during difficult intubations. The paradox is that there is no consensus on the anesthetic strategy for this procedure that counts four main methods for the airway management of patients requiring an ENT panendoscopy. In our center, the investigators use, in most situations, a variant of spontaneous ventilation described by Y. Jacquet et al., with the difference that the investigators use a transglottic oxygenation probe during the procedure. During laryngoscopy, the operator positions a naso-tracheal tube after local anesthesia of the vocal cords. The oxygen flow is reduced to 3 L/min before the exploration procedure. The arrival in operating theaters of the Optiflow™ system, developed by the New Zealand Company Fisher \& Paykel Healthcare, has led to a rethinking of the way oxygen is delivered. This device allows the administration of a flow rate of up to 70 L/min while delivering heated gases.

Detailed description

This device allows the administration of a flow rate of up to 70 L/min while delivering heated gases. The benefit of Optiflow™ no longer needs to be demonstrated for certain intensive care patients. In the field of Anesthesia, the number of publications raised up since the increase in the non-hypoxemic apnea time during general anesthesia is never equaled by other methods. What is known is that panendoscopy under general anesthesia in spontaneous ventilation is not unanimously accepted due to a higher risk regarding the time allowed for apnea, and laryngospasm complications. High-flow oxygen delivery provide a longer safe apnea time for patient safety. The aim of this investigation is to prove that high-flow oxygen therapy improves patient safety during general anesthesia for ENT panendoscopy. This should allow answering the question: shouldn't very high flow oxygenation be systematically offered for this procedure? Currently, there is no consensus as to the anaesthetic strategy for this procedure, if our hypothesis is verified; the Optiflow™ system could become de gold standard of the management of the upper airway during the ENT procedure.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
PROCEDURERespiratory Gas Delivery SystemOxygen therapy during general anesthesia for ENT panendoscopy

Timeline

Start date
2023-04-12
Primary completion
2025-05-30
Completion
2025-11-30
First posted
2023-01-25
Last updated
2026-03-31

Locations

1 site across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05696288. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.