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RecruitingNCT06879600

High-Flow Nasal Oxygen for Preoxygenation in Emergency Surgery Patients With Full Stomachs

Research on Pre-Anesthetic Blood Oxygenation Effect of High-Flow Nasal Oxygen for Emergency Surgery Patients With Full Stomachs

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
200 (estimated)
Sponsor
Nguyen Dang Thu · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Patients with full stomachs face a high risk of regurgitation and aspiration under general anesthesia. To minimize the time between the loss of airway protective reflexes and successful tracheal intubation, rapid sequence induction intubation is commonly used. However, these patients are particularly vulnerable to hypoxemia during anesthesia induction, especially in emergency cases. Pre-oxygenation before induction is crucial for ensuring patient safety during apnea. High-flow nasal oxygen (HFNO) therapy, which consists of an air/oxygen blender, an active humidifier, and a single heated circuit, has recently gained widespread use in intensive care units (ICUs) for managing hypoxemic respiratory failure. HFNC can deliver a constant fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO₂) from 0.21 to 1.0 at high flow rates (up to 60 L/min or higher). Its advantages include generating continuous positive airway pressure, reducing anatomical dead space, improving ventilation-perfusion matching, enhancing mucociliary clearance, and decreasing the work of breathing. Given these benefits, HFNO has the potential to improve pre-oxygenation before and during anesthesia induction in emergency surgery patients with full stomachs.

Detailed description

This is a prospective, single-center, randomized controlled trial designed to evaluate the effects of HFNO on preoxygenation before and during anesthesia induction in emergency surgery patients with full stomachs. Adult patients undergoing emergency surgery with general anesthesia will be enrolled in the study. After obtaining written informed consent, patients will be randomly assigned to one of the study groups: \- Intervention Group: Patients will undergo HFNO preoxygenation for 3 minutes with a flow rate of 60 L/min of heated and humidified pure oxygen (100% FiO₂, 37°C - Optiflow; Fisher \& Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand). To minimize air contamination, large or medium nasal cannulae will be selected based on the patient's nostril size. During the intubation process, HFNO will be maintained to facilitate either: Continuous oxygenation while the patient breathes spontaneously, or Apneic oxygenation during laryngoscopy for rapid sequence intubation (RSI). \- Control Group: Patients will undergo preoxygenation for 3 minutes using a face mask (sized appropriately to fit the patient and ensure an airtight seal) connected to an Aisys CS2 ventilation system (General Electric, GE Healthcare, Oy, Finland). In this group, the ventilation system will be set with a fresh gas flow of 10 L/min, FiO₂ = 100%, without inspiratory support or expiratory positive pressure. The face mask (Economy, Intersurgical, Fontenay-sous-Bois, France) will be removed after induction to enable intubation. Rapid sequence induction and intubation were performed using fentanyl (2 mcg/kg), propofol (2 mg/kg), and rocuronium (1 mg/kg). Intubation was performed 90 seconds after rocuronium administration. Cricoid pressure was applied from the moment the patient lost consciousness until intubation was successfully completed. The current guidelines advise interrupting intubation to focus on oxygenation (ie, face mask ventilation) for oxygen desaturation ≤94%.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEHigh-flow nasal cannula therapy applicationPatients will undergo HFNC preoxygenation for 3 minutes with a flow rate of 60 L/min of heated and humidified pure oxygen (100% FiO₂, 37°C - Optiflow; Fisher \& Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand). To minimize air contamination, large or medium nasal cannulae will be selected based on the patient's nostril size
DEVICETraditional facemaskPatients will undergo preoxygenation for 3 minutes using a face mask (sized appropriately to fit the patient and ensure an airtight seal) connected to an Aisys CS2 ventilation system (General Electric, GE Healthcare, Oy, Finland). In this group, the ventilation system will be set with a fresh gas flow of 10 L/min, FiO₂ = 100%, without inspiratory support or expiratory positive pressure. The face mask (Economy, Intersurgical, Fontenay-sous-Bois, France) will be removed after induction to enable intubation.

Timeline

Start date
2023-07-19
Primary completion
2026-12-15
Completion
2026-12-31
First posted
2025-03-17
Last updated
2025-03-17

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Vietnam

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT06879600. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.