Closed-loop Versus Conventional Ventilation Mode During Mobilization Period in Critical Care Patients : a Prospective Randomized Crossover Study
Overview
- Phase
- N/A
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Critical Ill Patients
- Sponsor
- Hopital of Melun
- Enrollment
- 267
- Locations
- 1
- Primary Endpoint
- Time spent with SpO2 values > 90 and < 95%
- Status
- Completed
- Last Updated
- 7 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Nursing is essential in critically ill patients care but with high risk of hypoxia, especially during mobilization. Full closed-loop control ventilation is well established for her safety in unselected ventilated critical care patients with different lung conditions compared to conventional ventilation.
The aim of this study is to assess the ability of a full closed-loop control ventilation (Intellivent-ASV, TM) to reduce hypoxia during mobilization period in unselected ventilated patients.
Detailed Description
Prospective randomized cross over study including all consecutive ventilated patient with predicted duration of ventilation \> 48 hours, inspired oxygen fraction \< 60% and without neuromuscular blocking agent. Patient were randomized to be ventilated with full closed-loop control or conventional ventilation 30 minutes before the first nursing period after inclusion. The ventilator was switched in the other mode (conventional or full closed-loop respectively), 30 minutes before the following nursing period. Between this two consecutive nursing periods, ventilation mode is choosed by the attending physician. The primary outcome was the oxygenation measured by pulse oxymetry during the nursing periods.
Investigators
Chelly Jonathan
MD
Hopital of Melun
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Invasive mechanical ventilation for expected time \>48h
Exclusion Criteria
- •Pregnancy
- •Neuromuscular blocking agent (discontinuous or continuous) infusion
- •Inspired oxygen fraction (FiO2) setting \> or = 60%
- •Mobilization contraindication (hemodynamic instability, unstable vertebral trauma, etc.)
- •Neurological breathing (patients with brain injury)
- •Pulse oxymetry monitoring unavailable
- •Expected ventilation weaning \<24h after randomization.
- •Moribund patients
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
Time spent with SpO2 values > 90 and < 95%
Time Frame: 1 day
Pulse oxymetry monitoring
Secondary Outcomes
- Time spent with SpO2 values < or = 90%(1 day)
- Time spent with SpO2 values > or = 95%(1 day)