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The Use of Capnography and Integrated Pulmonary Index in the Electrophysiology Laboratory

Not Applicable
Conditions
Sedation
Capnography
Interventions
Device: Capnographic monitoring
Registration Number
NCT03025490
Lead Sponsor
Hadassah Medical Organization
Brief Summary

The study sets out to assess whether in the context of nurse administered procedural sedation in the electrophysiology suite, the routine use of capnography and Integrated Pulmonary Index results in lower incidence of severe adverse respiratory events.

Detailed Description

In the electrophysiology lab, the use of procedural sedation, often by nurses is considered routine and safe.Standard monitoring during these procedures includes continuous Oxygen Saturation (SpO2), Heart Rate and rhythm and interval Respiratory rate and blood pressure.

Capnography allows for continuous monitoring of exhaled carbon dioxide, it is an important tool during anesthesia, providing valuable information on the patient's respiratory status and is standard equipment in most operating rooms. Its use in procedural sedation has increased over the past years as the body of evidence supporting this practice has been growing.

It has been previously shown, use of capnography may allow for earlier detection of respiratory adverse events in various types of procedural sedation. The fall of oxygen saturation can occur very late during an adverse respiratory event, especially if supplemental oxygen is given. Today's procedural sedation in the electrophysiology catheterization lab are more complex, patients are of increasingly older age, have more comorbidities, procedures are lengthier and often require deeper sedation (i.e. during complex ablation procedures).

The use of capnography in the electrophysiology lab has not been addressed thoroughly in the literature. A recent multidisciplinary review of anesthesia in the electrophysiology lab states: "In the obstructive sleep apnea or non-obstructive sleep apnea patient, capnography should ideally be employed throughout the sedation period."..."Capnography appears to be underutilized in the electrophysiology lab, given its omission from electrophysiology literature documenting safety of sedation by non-anesthesiologists" We hypothesize that the routine use of capnography during nurse administered procedural sedations in the electrophysiology lab could aid in detection of early signs of adverse respiratory events, thus allowing early intervention and reduction of these events.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
450
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Patient is 18 years of age or older
  2. Patient is scheduled to undergo nurse administered procedural sedation in the electrophysiology laboratory.
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Patient is scheduled for anesthesiology based anesthesia.
  2. Patient requires ventilator support at baseline (i.e. intubated patient, Bilevel Positive Airway Pressure or continuous positive airway pressure devices are in use)
  3. Patient presents to electrophysiology laboratory with capnography monitoring in place.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
CapnographyCapnographic monitoringPatient undergoing sedation, treatment team does have capnography data available.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of Sentinel Adverse Respiratory Events (AREs)One month
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Rate of Minimal Adverse Respiratory EventOne month
Rate of Moderate Adverse Respiratory EventOne month
Total rate of Adverse Respiratory EventOne month
Mean time to detection of a Sentinel or Moderate AREOne month
Rate of Minor Adverse Respiratory EventOne month

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hadassah Medical Organization

🇮🇱

Jerusalem District, Israel

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