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High Flow Oxygen in Patients Undergoing Surgery Under General Anesthesia

Does Optiflow Anesthesia Allow Anethesia Induction Without Hands ?

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03554863
Acronym
OPTIFLOW
Enrollment
60
Registered
2018-06-13
Start date
2018-11-21
Completion date
2019-02-14
Last updated
2019-03-05

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Anesthesia

Keywords

Anesthesia genral, Oxygen

Brief summary

Preoxygenation remains an important determinant of morbidity and mortality in anesthesia despite advances in mask ventilation and difficult intubation management. 1. The usual practice Preoxygenation prior to the injection of the anesthetic agents is the administration of pure oxygen to delay the occurrence of hypoxemia during the apnea phase and intubation maneuvers. It consists of applying a mask on the patient's face and allowing it to ventilate, ensuring a perfect seal of the device. The end of oxygen exhalation fraction is a good reflection of the alveolar oxygenation and a value of 95% corresponds to a total alveolar oxygenation. When this value is reached, the injection of the anesthetic agents (hypnotic, morphine and myorelaxant) leads to the loss of consciousness and apnea, which forces to continue the manual ventilation to the mask. Intubation is performed when the myorelaxation is complete. 2. Anesthetic induction without the hands The Optiflow Anesthesia (Fisher and Paykel Healthcare, Auckland, New Zealand) device provides heated, Humidified High-Flow Nasal Oxygen. The hypothesis of this study is that Humidified High-Flow Nasal Oxygen, should allow anesthetic induction without having to impose the patient the establishment of a facial mask for several minutes before anesthetic induction and the doctor anesthetist assisted ventilation with the mask before intubation.

Interventions

Nasal High Flow Oxygen using Optiflow device of Fisher and Paykel

Preoxygenation with facial mask

Sponsors

CMC Ambroise Paré
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 90 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Consent for participation * Affiliation to the french social security system * Patients benefit general anesthesia with oral intubation

Exclusion criteria

* Pregnant or breastfeeding patients; * Patients with difficulty of ventilation by Optiflow AnesthesiaTM (facial trauma); * Patients under the protection of justice * Patients with drained or undrained pneumothorax; * Patients with a predicted difficulty of mask ventilation or intubation according to the clinical examination prior to inclusion (arne score ≥ 11) or when treating the patient in the operating room; * Patients with coronary heart disease, heart failure or respiratory failure; * Patients with intracranial pathology; patients with arterial oxygen saturation \<95% in the open air; * Patients for whom the surgical procedure requires the installation of a double-lumen tube; * Patients requiring rapid sequence induction; patients for whom the induction can not be carried out by the sequence sufentanil, propofol, rocuronium; * Patients with sugammadex allergy; * Patients placed under judicial protection * Patients who have already been included in the study

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Recourse to another ventilation techniqueDuring the preoxygenation-induction-intubation period (30 min)The preoxygenation-induction-intubation period is filmed (audio and video recording) and the use of mask ventilation will be confirmed a posteriori from the audio / video recording by two reviewers.

Countries

France

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026