Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Recruiting

RecruitingNCT06464263

Dexmedetomidine Versus Midazolam-Fentanyl for Analgesia and Sedation

Comparative Study Between Dexmedetomidine Versus Midazolam-Fentanyl for Analgesia and Sedation After Adult Valvular Cardiac Surgeries; a Prospective Randomized Blinded Clinical Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
60 (estimated)
Sponsor
Egymedicalpedia · Industry
Sex
All
Age
21 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Postoperative sedation is an essential component in recovery of the patient undergoing cardiac surgery. It facilitates the patient's unawareness of the environment as well as reduce the discomfort and anxiety caused by surgery, intubation, mechanical ventilation, suction, and physiotherapy. Despite the advances in anesthesia and surgical techniques, the duration of mechanical ventilation (MV) may be prolonged after cardiac surgery, due to the classic high-dose narcotic-based cardiac anesthesia.

Detailed description

In recent years, fast-track extubation (FTE) protocols have been developed to reduce the long period of intubation and complications that may occur due to the long duration of MV. Potential advantages of FTE protocols following surgery for congenital cardiac disease are reduced ventilator-associated pulmonary complications and the negative effects of positive pressure ventilation, reduced nosocomial infections, postoperative atelectasis, reduced requirements of sedatives and analgesic drugs, early enteral feeding, rapid patient mobilization, and shorter intensive care unit (ICU) stay. The ideal analgesic-sedative agents would keep the patient comfortable without anxiety. It would effectively provide adequate sedation, but also allow neurologic evaluation of the patient, ideally without stopping administration of the drug. It would have minimal hemodynamic and respiratory depressant effects. It also would have a rapid onset and offset of action without drug accumulation or active metabolites, making it easily titratable and allowing rapid recovery with a prompt return to normal activity after discontinuation. Opioids and benzodiazepines are the most frequently used analgesic-sedative agents after cardiac surgery. Although opioid can provide excellent analgesia, the doses for effective pain relief may lead to undesirable side effects, such as respiratory depression requiring prolonged MV, hemodynamic instability, tolerance, and significant withdrawal symptoms that also delay patient recovery. Dexmedetomidine is a highly selective α2-adrenoreceptor agonist. Presynaptic activation of α2-adrenoreceptors at sympathetic nerve endings inhibits catecholamine release. The major effect of dexmedetomidine is maintaining sedation-analgesia without a respiratory depressant effect. It has relatively few cardiovascular side effects and produces sleep-like sedation without narcosis or respiratory depression. Indeed, current guidelines recommend lighter levels of sedation to manage ventilated patients preferably using nonbenzodiazepine sedatives. Nevertheless, there is currently no consistent recommendation regarding which nonbenzodiazepine sedative agents should be used.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGDexmedetomidineto investigate the postoperative analgesic-sedative effect of dexmedetomidine versus fentanyl-midazolam to achieve fast-track extubation after adult valvular cardiac surgeries.

Timeline

Start date
2024-02-10
Primary completion
2026-02-01
Completion
2026-02-10
First posted
2024-06-18
Last updated
2024-06-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Egypt

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06464263. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.