Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT06316817

FloPatch for Prevention of Hypotension After Induction of General Anesthesia

Prediction of Hypotension After Induction of General Anesthesia Using Wearable Carotid Artery Doppler Ultrasound Patch in Adult Patients Undergoing Elective Noncardiac Surgery: a Prospective Observational Study

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
172 (actual)
Sponsor
Mount Sinai Hospital, Canada · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

This study is being conducted to find out if a special device called FloPatch™, which sticks to a persons skin and uses ultrasound to check the blood flow in their neck, can tell if someone going to have low blood pressure after they get put to sleep for surgery. The investigators will be testing this in adults who are having elective non-heart surgery. Basically, the goal is to see if this device can help predict who might have low blood pressure during surgery. Hypotension is a common side-effect of general anesthesia induction, and is related to adverse outcomes, including significantly increasing risk of one-year mortality. Even short durations of intraoperative hypotension have been associated with acute kidney injury (AKI) and myocardial injury. Myocardial injury after non-cardiac surgery (MINS) is a common postoperative complication associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes, and intraoperative hypotension is believed to be involved in its development. In the preoperative setting, a systematic review of 50 studies (2,260 patients) evaluating techniques to assess adult patients with refractory hypotension or signs of organ hypoperfusion found that half of all patients were fluid-responsive, pointing to volume status as a significant risk factor, while also presenting a challenge in distinguishing fluid-responders from non-responders. For surgical patients, preoperative fasting, hypertonic bowel preparations, anesthetic agents, and positive pressure ventilation all contribute to reduced effective circulating blood volume. Optimized fluid therapy remains the cornerstone of treatment of hypovolemia, with excellent effectiveness. Since the liberal use of fluids may result in fluid overload, which is associated with the development of pulmonary edema, wound infection, postoperative ileus, and anastomotic leakage, it is imperative to identify those patients who may benefit from it. The hypothesis is that the corrected Flow Time (cFT) measured by the FloPatch will help predict hypotension after the induction of general anesthesia.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEFloPatchA novel, hands-free ultrasound patch for continuous monitoring of quantitative Doppler in the carotid artery.

Timeline

Start date
2024-04-01
Primary completion
2024-09-26
Completion
2024-09-26
First posted
2024-03-18
Last updated
2025-06-05

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Canada

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06316817. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.