The comparison of close and open tracheal tube suction on severity of pain and physiological indicators in patients under mechanical ventilation with traumatic brain injuries
- Conditions
- Condition 1: Pain. Condition 2: physiological indicators. Condition 3: Traumatic brain injuries.Pain, unspecifiedOther lack of expected normal physiological developmentS06.9Intracrani
- Registration Number
- IRCT2016052311399N4
- Lead Sponsor
- Vice chancellor for research, Semnan University of Medical Sciences
- Brief Summary
Not available
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- Complete
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 116
The Patient is placed under mechanical ventilation simply due to traumatic brain injuries or to subsequent secondary complications; The patient is in a coma and his GCS is less than 8; Endotracheal tube is used for patients in order to get airway; Endotracheal tube is merely through the mouth; They don’t take pain medications; Their livers and kidneys do not have trauma in the latest incident; They don’t take neuromuscular blockers; They need endotracheal tube secretion suctioning and patients don’t have severe face injuries. Exclusion criteria: The patient is brain-dead; They need to regain their suction before two hours; The existence of dangerous cardiac arrhythmias in monitoring patients; Any pain before suctioning; The use of painkillers or drugs on the stimulation of the patient’s upper airway secretions drainage and history of patients’ CPR after hospitalization.
Not provided
Study & Design
- Study Type
- interventional
- Study Design
- Not specified
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Pain. Timepoint: Before suctioning, during suctioning, 5 minutes after suctioning. Method of measurement: Critical-care pain objective tool.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Physiological indicators. Timepoint: Before suctioning, during suctioning, 5 minutes after suctioning. Method of measurement: Monitoring devices, pulse oximetry, recorded ETCo2.