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The Effect of Two Airway Interventions, During One Lung Ventilation, on Blood Oxygen Content

Not Applicable
Conditions
Thoracic, Diseases
Interventions
Procedure: RM + Positive End Expiratory Pressure
Procedure: Continuous Positive Airway Pressure
Registration Number
NCT01495936
Lead Sponsor
Lawson Health Research Institute
Brief Summary

Patients requiring one lung ventilation (OLV) for open thoracic surgery will be ventilated (breathing performed by a breathing machine) during anesthesia using a lung protective ventilation strategy (small breath volumes at 6ml/kg). During thoracic surgery the anesthesiologist is able to ventilate only one lung by inserting a special breathing tube, allowing the surgeon to operate on the non ventilated (diseased) lung. In a randomized trial two interventions used to improve blood oxygen levels during one lung ventilation will be compared . The two interventions are:

1. Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) applied to the non ventilated (non breathing) lung and

2. Positive End Expiratory Pressure following a lung Recruitment Maneuver (RM-PEEP) to the ventilated (breathing) lung.

CPAP is performed by applying a steady flow of oxygen to the non ventilated (non breathing) lung at a continuous gentle pressure of 5cmH20.

To perform a Recruitment Maneuver (RM) the anesthesiologist inflates the ventilated (breathing) lung with oxygen, holding the breath for 25 seconds so all the lung is opened up. Immediately after the recruitment maneuver PEEP will be applied. PEEP is an action which also helps keep the lung open, maintaining the benefits achieved by the RM. It is performed by adjusting settings on the ventilator (breathing machine). The ventilator creates and applies a gentle pressure (5cmH20) to the ventilating lung at the end of each breath.

The outcome measure will be the oxygen content in blood (PaO2), measured in mmHg, using blood sample analysis.

The null hypothesis is that compared to CPAP, RM-PEEP does not significantly increase the oxygen content of blood during OLV when using a lung protective ventilation strategy.

Detailed Description

Patients requiring one lung ventilation (OLV) for open thoracic surgery will be ventilated intra-operatively using a lung protective ventilation strategy (small tidal volumes {Vts} at 6ml/kg Ideal Body Weight {IBW}). In a randomized, crossover trial Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP) to the non ventilated lung or a Recruitment Maneuver (RM) followed by the application of Positive End Expiratory Pressure (PEEP) (acronym RM-PEEP) to the ventilated lung will be applied and blood oxygenation (PaO2) measured by arterial blood gas sampling to determine which intervention has the most beneficial effect on PaO2 (CPAP or RM-PEEP).

CPAP will be applied at a pressure of 5cmH2O by a CPAP breathing circuit (designed for the purpose and commonly used in anesthetic practice). The PEEP will be applied at a pressure of 5cmH20 by the operating room (OR) anesthetic machine. The RM will involve a valsalva maneuver, held for 5 seconds at a pressure of 25cmH20, again performed using the OR anesthetic machine.

Null hypothesis: Compared to CPAP, RM-PEEP does not significantly increase PaO2 or reduce the incidence of hypoxia (oxygen blood saturation less than or equal to 90%), when employing a lung protective ventilation strategy.

This study is based on our previous research (citation 12, Badner et al) in which we compared CPAP to PEEP alone (omitting the recruitment maneuver). Here it was noted that CPAP to the non ventilated lung improved oxygenation more than PEEP to the ventilated lung (even though PEEP is an easier modality to provide), when employing a lung protective ventilation strategy.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Age 18 or older
  2. Competent to give consent to enroll in study
  3. Booked for scheduled open thoracotomy which involves wedge resection, lobectomy or pneumonectomy requiring OLV
  4. American Society of Anesthesia physical status score (ASA) 1-4
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Unable to give consent
  2. Pregnant women
  3. Inability to insert an arterial line
  4. Presence of other significant pulmonary impairment (PaO2 on room air <50mmHg, PaCO2 >50mmHg or known pulmonary hypertension (mean PAP>25mmHg)
  5. Presence of significant cardiovascular disease
  6. Altered liver function (Child Pugh scale ≥B)
  7. Patients with bullous lung disease. -

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
RM + Positive End Expiratory PressureRM + Positive End Expiratory PressureAfter 20 minutes of ventilation on one lung (during anesthesia) the patient will be randomly assigned to the study arm "RM + Positive End Expiratory pressure" which is a Recruitment Maneuver (RM) followed by Positive End Expiratory Pressure (RM-PEEP) which will be applied to the ventilating lung at a pressure of 5cmH2O.
Continuous Positive Airway PressureContinuous Positive Airway PressureAfter 20 minutes ventilation on one lung (during anesthesia) the patient will be randomly assigned to the study arm "Continuous Positive Airway Pressure (CPAP)". CPAP will be applied for 20 minutes to the non-ventilated lung at a pressure of 5cmH20 using the disposable Mallinckrodt Bronchocath CPAP system.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Partial pressure of oxygen in bloodDay 1

Time 0 (the patient is anesthetized and being ventilated on two lungs, just prior to the commencement of one lung ventilation). Time 20 minutes (patient has been ventilated on one lung for 20 minutes and immediately prior to instituting one of the two intervention arms). Time 40 minutes (following a period of 20 minutes on one intervention arm \[either CPAP or RM-PEEP\]. The patient will then enter second intervention arm). Time 60 minutes ( 20 minutes after second intervention arm \[either CPAP or RM-PEEP\])

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
HypoxiaDay 1

The incidence of hypoxia (oxygen saturation falling below 90%, measured by pulse oximetry) throughout the entire study period will be recorded and correlated with the study stage.

Hypoxia intervention techniquesDay 1

The incidence of necessary hypoxia (oxygen saturation below 90%) intervention techniques (performed by the attending anesthesiologist) will be recorded once the patient has been commenced on one lung ventilation. The interventions recorded will be

1. The need to revert back to two lung ventilation

2. The need to clamp the operative pulmonary artery

3. The need to add CPAP to the non ventilated lung despite being in the RM-PEEP arm of the study.

4. The need to add a RM-PEEP to the ventilated lung despite being in the CPAP arm of the study

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Victoria Hospital

🇨🇦

London, Ontario, Canada

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