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Ventilation With ASV Mode in Children

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Mechanical Ventilation
Interventions
Procedure: ASV ventilation
Registration Number
NCT03930147
Lead Sponsor
University of Lausanne Hospitals
Brief Summary

ASV mode of ventilation is an automatic mode with closed-loop control used for mechanical invasive ventilation in intubated patients. It has been studied in adult patients but not in children.

This interventional physiology study will include 40 children on mechanical invasive ventilation.

Detailed Description

The objective of the study is to assess the feasibility of ASV in children and compare physiologic values on ASV mode to Pressure-Control and Pressure-Support mode of ventilation regarding the participant is on active or passive ventilation phase.

Physiologic values will be monitored on different modes of ventilation in a randomized order. Each participant will be his own control regarding the different modes of ventilation. Monitoring will be done during 90 minutes for each mode of ventilation.

Participant will have two different phases of ventilation. The first one is the passive phase (participant does not trigger the ventilator cycle sustainly) in which ASV and Pressure-Control Ventilation will be performed in a randomized order. The second phase will be the active ventilation phase (participant does trigger the ventilator cycle sustainly) in which ASV and Pressure-Support Ventilation will be performed in a randomized order.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
40
Inclusion Criteria
  • children on invasive mechanical ventilation admitted in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit at Lausanne University Hospital
  • Body weight > 6kg
  • Absence of pulmonary comorbidity
  • Age < 10 years
Exclusion Criteria
  • Patient already included in other interventional clinical study
  • body weight < 6kg
  • age > 10 years
  • more than 20% of air leak around endotracheal tube
  • chronic or acute pulmonary disease (ARDS, cystic fibrosis, severe asthma, lobectomy, severe bronchomalacia or severe tracheomalacia)
  • severe pulmonary hypertension on inhaled nitric oxide treatment
  • severe hemodynamic instability (more than 0.5mcg/kg/min of norepinephrine infusion or other high dose vasoactive agent infusion)
  • intracranial hypertension (more than 20mmHg if measured) or suspected intracranial hypertension

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Passive phase, ASV / Pressure-Control Ventilation orderASV ventilation90 minutes of ASV, change to Pressure-Control Ventilation mode with 15 to 30 minutes of washout, 90 minutes of Pressure-Control Ventilation.
Active phase, ASV / Pressure-Support orderASV ventilation90 minutes of ASV, change to Pressure-Support Ventilation with 15 to 30 minutes of washout, 90 minutes of Pressure-Support Ventilation.
Passive phase, Pressure-Control Ventilation / ASV orderASV ventilation90 minutes of Pressure-Control Ventilation, change to ASV mode with 15 to 30 minutes of washout, 90 minutes of ASV. Return to Pressure-Control Ventilation mode at the end of the intervention.
Active phase, Pressure-Support / ASV orderASV ventilation90 minutes of Pressure-Support Ventilation, change to ASV mode with 15 to 30 minutes of washout, 90 minutes of ASV. Return to Pressure-Support Ventilation at the end of the intervention.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Change of respiratory rateContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Change of tidal volumeContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Change of peak inspiratory pressureContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Evolution of Mean airway pressureContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of Minute VentilationContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of inspiratory timeContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of the variation of peak inspiratory pressureContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of end-tidal CO2Continuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of the variation of end-tidal CO2Continuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of transcutaneous CO2Recording every 5 minutes during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of ratio inspiratory time/expiratory timeContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of respiratory system time constantContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP)Continuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of variation of transcutaneous CO2Recording every 5 minutes during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of variation of transcutaneous oxygen saturationContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of Crs (respiratory system compliance calculated by the ventilator)Continuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of respiratory system resistanceContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of the variation of respiratory rateContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of variation of inspired oxygen fractionContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of the work load of mechanical ventilation for doctormonitoring phase of 90 minutes

Recording of all modification done on ventilator parameters done by doctor during each monitoring phase

Evolution of inspired oxygen fractionContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of transcutaneous oxygen saturationContinuous recording during each monitoring phase of 90 minutes, 360 minutes

Physiological respiratory value of mechanical ventilation

Evolution of mechanical ventilation tolerancemonitoring phase of 90 minutes

Recording of all sedation drugs administered to the participant during each monitoring phase

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Lausanne University Hospital

🇨🇭

Lausanne, Switzerland

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