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RecruitingNCT07004686

Effect of MGRNOX-Guided General Anesthesia on Opioid Consumption in Patients

Effect of MGRNOX-Guided General Anesthesia on Opioid Consumption in Patients:A Randomized Controlled Trial

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
112 (estimated)
Sponsor
Peking University Shenzhen Hospital · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 64 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

1. Pain management is a crucial part of general anesthesia surgery. Nociception monitoring can help anesthesiologists better titrate the use of intraoperative analgesic drugs, especially the opioid. 2. Although a variety of nociception monitoring devices have been developed to date, there is not a specific monitoring indicator that serves as the "gold standard" to objectively guide analgesic management in general anesthesia. 3. The MGRNOX index, which is derived from electroencephalogram (EEG), is used to reflect the correlation between noxious stimuli and opioid analgesics in a state of general anesthesia by converting and quantifying the EEG signals collected by the instrument. However, no studies have so far verified the effect of the MGRNOX index-guided analgesic management of general anesthesia on the consumption of opioids in patients. 4. This study aims to explore the effect of MGRNOX index-guided general anesthesia on opioid consumption in patients undergoing laparoscopic cholecystectomy and the primary hypothesis of our study is that using the MGRNOX index to guide intraoperative pain management during general anesthesia can significantly reduce the consumption of remifentanil during the surgery.

Detailed description

Pain management is a critical component of perioperative anesthesia. Traditionally, anesthesiologists adjust analgesic dosages based on intraoperative heart rate or blood pressure, relying heavily on personal clinical experience. This approach often leads to over- or under-administration of analgesics. Currently, opioids remain the primary analgesics used in general anesthesia. Excessive opioid doses can result in postoperative hyperalgesia, delayed recovery, respiratory and circulatory depression, and increased hepatic/renal burden. Conversely, insufficient opioid doses may lead to inadequate analgesia, intraoperative hemodynamic instability, postoperative pain, and agitation. In recent years, various nociception monitoring devices (e.g., SPI, ANI, qNOX) have been developed to quantify intraoperative nociception, assisting anesthesiologists in optimizing analgesic administration to achieve precision and balanced anesthesia. Studies suggest that nociception-guided analgesia during general anesthesia surgery reduces opioid consumption, alleviates postoperative pain, and improves hemodynamic stability compared to traditional standardized management. However, due to the limitations of existing indices, no specific parameter has yet been established as a gold standard for objectively reflecting intraoperative nociception levels. The MGRNOX index, a China-developed metric based on central nervous system monitoring, derives from processed and quantified electroencephalographic (EEG) signals under general anesthesia to reflect a patient's analgesic state. As clinical evidence for MGRNOX remains limited and its impact on intraoperative opioid usage remains unvalidated, the investigators designed this randomized controlled trial to investigate whether MGRNOX-guided general anesthesia reduces opioid consumption during laparoscopic cholecystectomies. Our primary hypothesis is that intraoperative MGRNOX-guided analgesia will significantly decrease remifentanil requirements.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICEMGRNOX index-guided analgesiaAfter anesthesia induction, the remifentanil plasma target concentration was adjusted intraoperatively to maintain the MGRNOX index between 30 and 50,but MAP and HR also were considered .In case the MGRNOX index was below 30 for more than 1 minute, remifentanil target-controlled infusion levels were lowered in steps of 0.5 ng/ml , whereas in case of a value greater than 50 for more than 1 minute, remifentanil target-controlled infusion levels were increased in steps of 0.5 ng/ml.
DEVICEStandard Clinical CareAfter anesthesia induction, if hypertension (MAP \> 100 mmHg) or tachycardia (heart rate \> 90 bpm) persists for more than 2 minutes, remifentanil target-controlled infusion levels were increased in steps of 0.5 ng/ml.If there is no response to remifentanil or the MAP and HR exceed a certain threshold, then urapidil or esmolol will be administered.For hypotension (50 mmHg \< MAP ≤ 60 mmHg) persisting for more than 2 minutes, remifentanil target-controlled infusion levels were lowered in steps of 0.5 ng/ml (lowest target plasma concentration that was allowed is 1 ng/ml), and 4μg of norepinephrine were given. If MAP ≤ 50 mmHg, remifentanil target-controlled infusion levels were lowered in steps of 0.5 ng/ml(lowest target plasma concentration that was allowed is 1 ng/ml), and 8μg of norepinephrine were given.

Timeline

Start date
2025-06-28
Primary completion
2026-05-30
Completion
2026-05-30
First posted
2025-06-04
Last updated
2025-12-18

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07004686. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.