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Effects of Positive End-expiratory Pressure and Tidal Volume on Fluid Responsiveness of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome

30 de noviembre de 2012 actualizado por: Huang chung chi, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

Effects of Positive End-expiratory Pressure and Tidal Volume on Fluid Responsiveness of Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome.

Fluid responsiveness (FR)refers to the ability of heart to increase its stroke volume in response to volume load.Low tidal volume and high PEEP exerts contrast effect on the prediction of fluid responsiveness, the aim of this study is to compare the relative predicting power of the dynamic preload indicator (PPV, SVV), passive leg raising test, and pleth variability index (PVI) on the fluid responsiveness of acute respiratory distress syndrome ventilated with various PEEP levels or various tidal volumes.

Descripción general del estudio

Descripción detallada

In septic critically ill mechanically ventilated patients with acute circulatory failure, inadequate volume resuscitation leads to multiple organ failure. Early goal-directed therapy emphasizes early and aggressive hemodynamic support in patients with severe sepsis and septic shock. On the other hand, because of increased microvascular permeability and capillary leakage, conservative fluid management and more aggressive restriction in fluid accumulation to reduce lung water and tissue edema has been suggested by acute respiratory distress syndrome net. Fluid responsiveness refers to the ability of the heart to increase its stroke volume in response to volume load. Accurately predicting volume responsiveness will be beneficial in obviating the need for unnecessary fluid loading, and in detecting patients who may benefit from a volume load.

By inducing cyclic changes in pleural and transpulmonary pressure, mechanical ventilation results in cyclic changes in the preload and afterload, and therefore, the cyclic variation in systolic and pulse pressure. Recently, a systemic review concluded that dynamic preload indicator [pulse pressure variation (PPV), stroke volume variation (SVV)] are highly accurate in predicting volume responsiveness in critically ill patients. However, this technique is limited to patients who receive controlled ventilation with adequate tidal volume (> 8 ml/Kg) and sedation or paralysis is needed to abolish the spontaneous ventilation.

For acute respiratory distress syndrome patients, protective ventilatory strategy suggested low tidal volume to 6 ml/Kg. On the contrary, high PEEP needed for acute respiratory distress syndrome to prevent VALI induces a leftward shift to the steep pat of the Frank-Starling curve and increase the fluid responsiveness. Whether the dynamic preload indicators (PPV and SVV) are still effective in acute respiratory distress syndrome patients for predicting fluid responsiveness remain controversial.

Passive leg raising (PLR), by inducing a gravitational transfer of blood from the lower part of the body toward the central circulatory compartment, can be considered as a brief "self volume challenge". Recently, a systemic review and meta-analysis concluded that PLR-induced changes in cardiac output reliably predict fluid responsiveness regardless of ventilation mode, underlying cardiac rhythm and technique of measurement and can be recommended for routine assessment of fluid responsiveness in the majority of ICU population. More importantly, this prediction remains very valuable in patients with cardiac arrhythmias or spontaneous breathing activity.

Respiratory variations in the pulse oximeter plethysmographic waveform amplitude (ΔPOP) have been shown to be able to predict fluid responsiveness in mechanically ventilated patients. The main advantage of this index is that it is noninvasive, widely available, and inexpensive. Perfusion index (PI), the percentage between the infrared pulsatile and nonpulsatile signal, reflects the amplitude of the pulse oximeter waveform. Recently, Pleth Variability Index (PVI), derived from perfusion index, affords a continuous monitoring of ΔPOP. PVI has been shown to be correlated to ΔPOP and PPV and has been demonstrated to be equivalent to SVV as a predictor of fluid responsiveness in ventilated patients during major surgery. However, whether the PVI can predict the fluid responsiveness in acute respiratory distress syndrome necessitating low tidal volume and high PEEP is not clear.

Because of the aforementioned contrasting effects of low tidal volume and high PEEP on the prediction of fluid responsiveness, the aim of this study is to compare the relative predicting power of the dynamic preload indicator (PPV, SVV), passive leg raising test, and PVI on the fluid responsiveness of acute respiratory distress syndrome ventilated with various PEEP levels or various tidal volumes.

Tipo de estudio

De observación

Inscripción (Anticipado)

30

Contactos y Ubicaciones

Esta sección proporciona los datos de contacto de quienes realizan el estudio e información sobre dónde se lleva a cabo este estudio.

Ubicaciones de estudio

      • Taipei, Taiwán, 10507
        • Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

Criterios de participación

Los investigadores buscan personas que se ajusten a una determinada descripción, denominada criterio de elegibilidad. Algunos ejemplos de estos criterios son el estado de salud general de una persona o tratamientos previos.

Criterio de elegibilidad

Edades elegibles para estudiar

18 años y mayores (Adulto, Adulto Mayor)

Acepta Voluntarios Saludables

No

Géneros elegibles para el estudio

Todos

Método de muestreo

Muestra de probabilidad

Población de estudio

mechanically ventilated ALL/ARDS patients conforming to the American European Consensus Conference criteria with acute circulatory failure for whom the attending clinician had decided to administer fluid will be enrolled.This decision was based on the presence of at least one clinical sign of inadequate tissue perfusion in the absence of contraindication for fluid infusion.

Descripción

Inclusion Criteria: Clinical signs of inadequate tissue perfusion were defined

  1. systolic blood pressure< 9 mmHg(or a decrease > 50 mmHg in previously hypertensive patients)
  2. need of vasopressive drugs(dopamine > 5 ug/Kg/min or norepinephrine)
  3. urine output<0.5 mL/Kg/hr for at least 2 hrs
  4. tachycardia (heart rate >100/min)
  5. presence of skin mottling.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. patient with spontaneous respiratory activity
  2. cardiac arrhythmia
  3. known intracardiac shunt
  4. contraindication for passive leg raising(PLR),e.g.,pelvic trauma
  5. unstable spine injuries or leg amputation
  6. hemodynamic instability during the procedure,defined by a variation in heart rate or blood pressure of>10%over the 15-min period before starting the protocol
  7. Patients of renal failure necessitate renal replacement therapy will be excluded also.

Plan de estudios

Esta sección proporciona detalles del plan de estudio, incluido cómo está diseñado el estudio y qué mide el estudio.

¿Cómo está diseñado el estudio?

Detalles de diseño

Cohortes e Intervenciones

Grupo / Cohorte
Intervención / Tratamiento
ARDS with acute circulatory failure
acute respiratory distress syndrome with acute circulatory failure with infusion of 6% tetrastarch for a total of 500ml

¿Qué mide el estudio?

Medidas de resultado primarias

Medida de resultado
Medida Descripción
Periodo de tiempo
increase of cardiac output after volume expansion
Periodo de tiempo: 4 hours
Patients are classified to be volume expansion responders or nonresponders according to whether the volume expansion induced cardiac index increase at the end of hydroxyethyl starch infusion is ≧15% or < 15% of baseline cardiac index.
4 hours

Colaboradores e Investigadores

Aquí es donde encontrará personas y organizaciones involucradas en este estudio.

Investigadores

  • Investigador principal: Chung-Chi Huang, MD, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital

Fechas de registro del estudio

Estas fechas rastrean el progreso del registro del estudio y los envíos de resultados resumidos a ClinicalTrials.gov. Los registros del estudio y los resultados informados son revisados ​​por la Biblioteca Nacional de Medicina (NLM) para asegurarse de que cumplan con los estándares de control de calidad específicos antes de publicarlos en el sitio web público.

Fechas importantes del estudio

Inicio del estudio

1 de noviembre de 2012

Finalización primaria (Anticipado)

1 de julio de 2014

Fechas de registro del estudio

Enviado por primera vez

26 de octubre de 2012

Primero enviado que cumplió con los criterios de control de calidad

29 de octubre de 2012

Publicado por primera vez (Estimar)

30 de octubre de 2012

Actualizaciones de registros de estudio

Última actualización publicada (Estimar)

3 de diciembre de 2012

Última actualización enviada que cumplió con los criterios de control de calidad

30 de noviembre de 2012

Última verificación

1 de noviembre de 2012

Más información

Esta información se obtuvo directamente del sitio web clinicaltrials.gov sin cambios. Si tiene alguna solicitud para cambiar, eliminar o actualizar los detalles de su estudio, comuníquese con register@clinicaltrials.gov. Tan pronto como se implemente un cambio en clinicaltrials.gov, también se actualizará automáticamente en nuestro sitio web. .

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