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A "Less-rapid" Sequence Anesthetic Induction/Intubation Sequence? Does Apneic Oxygenation by Means of an Oxygenating Laryngoscope Blade Prolong the "Duration of Apnea Without Desaturation" in Paralyzed Non-obese and Morbidly Obese Patients?

Not Applicable
Withdrawn
Conditions
Apneic Oxygenation
Interventions
Device: Without apneic oxygenation
Registration Number
NCT02943629
Lead Sponsor
Vanderbilt University
Brief Summary

The study will test the efficacy of the Pentax AWSTM video laryngoscope (VLS) equipped with a P Blade (Figure 1) as the means to provide Apneic Oxygenation (AO) and prolong Duration of Apnea Without Desaturation (DAWD) in non-obese and morbidly obese females.

Detailed Description

Pre-oxygenation/de-nitrogenation for three minutes of spontaneous breathing or alternatively four to eight deep breaths prior to rapid sequence anesthetic induction/intubation (RSII) in patients with healthy lungs, low oxygen demands and normal hemoglobin levels allows up to eight minutes of safe apnea time or DAWD.

The study will test the efficacy of the Pentax AWSTM video laryngoscope (VLS) equipped with a P Blade as the means to provide apneic oxygenation and prolong DAWD. The P Blade sports a suction conduit which can equally well provide a conduit for oxygen administration. The initial phase of the study will include non-obese healthy (ASAR 1-2) women patients requiring endotracheal anesthesia for gynecologic (open or laparoscopic) abdominal surgery. Subsequently a cohort of morbidly obese patients (BM I ≥ 40 kg/m2) also requiring gynecologic abdominal access will be recruited for investigation.

Participants of each group (obese, non-obese) will be randomized to apneic oxygenation with the the Pentax AWS Laryngoscope or no apneic oxygenation.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
WITHDRAWN
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
Not specified
Inclusion Criteria
  1. Female patients,
  2. American Society of Anesthesiologists Rating 1-2,
  3. Aged 18 through 65 years of age
  4. Elective gynecological surgery via an abdominal approach (laparoscopic or open)
  5. Already consented to general anesthesia necessitating endotracheal intubation.
  6. Are candidates for anesthesia using laryngeal mask airway if needed
Exclusion Criteria
  1. Patient refusal to enter study
  2. History of difficult mask ventilation
  3. History of, or anticipated difficult intubation
  4. Heavy Smokers (> 10 cigarettes per day)
  5. Asthma
  6. Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
  7. Heart Disease
  8. Renal or Liver disease
  9. Neurological disease.
  10. Women scored at ≥ 3/4 on the modified Mallampati scale 30.
  11. Women exhibiting other signs of a potential difficult intubation (limited neck flexion or extension; neck circumference > 30 cm; prominent incisors)
  12. Patients with a baseline resting oxygenation level of less than 95%.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Non-Obese: Without Apneic OxygenationWithout apneic oxygenationNon-obese healthy female patients requiring endotracheal anesthesia for gynecologic (open or laparoscopic) abdominal surgery will have the Pentax AWSTM video laryngoscope with attached P blade placed for eight minutes, or earlier if SpO2 falls to ≤ 95%. The trachea will then be intubated and the ventilation of the lungs will commence using 100% oxygen until SpO2 ≥ 98%.
Obese: Without Apneic OxygenationWithout apneic oxygenationMorbidly obese patients (BM I ≥ 40 kg/m2) requiring endotracheal anesthesia for gynecologic (open or laparoscopic) abdominal surgery will have the Pentax AWSTM video laryngoscope with attached P blade placed for five minutes, or earlier if SpO2 falls to ≤ 95%. The trachea will then be intubated and the ventilation of the lungs will commence using 100% oxygen until SpO2 ≥ 98%.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Duration of apnea without desaturationTime in seconds from the initiation of laryngoscopy until the time at which Sp02 falls to 95%, or until 8 minutes have elapsed
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
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