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Effects of High Flow Humidified Oxygen on Umbilical Artery Acid-base Balance in Cesarean Section Under Spinal Anesthesia

The Effectiveness of Binaural Beats on Midazolam Requirement During Cesarean Section With Spinal Anesthesia

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT07515716
Enrollment
200
Registered
2026-04-07
Start date
2026-04-07
Completion date
2027-03-31
Last updated
2026-04-07

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

Conditions

Pregnancy, Cesarean Section, Spinal Anesthesia

Brief summary

Spinal anesthesia is the most commonly used anesthetic technique for cesarean section in developed countries, but vasodilation and a decrease in systemic vascular resistance caused by sympathetic blockade result in hypotension in 7-74% of parturients. The fetus receives oxygen from the mother via uteroplacental blood flow, and because uteroplacental circulation during pregnancy has minimal autoregulation, uterine blood flow changes in proportion to maternal blood pressure. Therefore, a reduction in uterine blood flow due to maternal hypotension can lead to fetal hypoxia or acidosis and is associated with low Apgar scores after birth. Oxygen administration may offer potential benefits, such as improving maternal cerebral perfusion and preventing fetal ischemic injury, and thus low-flow oxygen via a conventional nasal cannula is commonly used. However, there are few studies evaluating the effects of high-flow oxygen administration on fetal well-being during cesarean section under spinal anesthesia. Low-flow oxygen delivery through a conventional nasal cannula, which is commonly used during cesarean section under spinal anesthesia, results in a fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO₂) of less than 40% due to dilution with ambient air. In contrast, OptiFlow THRIVE (Fisher and Paykel Healthcare, Panmure, Auckland, New Zealand) is a device capable of delivering high-flow oxygen through a nasal interface, allowing administration of 100% oxygen to the mother and potentially providing greater protection against fetal ischemic injury. Delivering non-humidified oxygen at flow rates above 10 L/min causes significant discomfort in awake patients, but OptiFlow THRIVE passes the gas through a heated humidification chamber immediately before delivery, enabling the administration of warmed and humidified oxygen even at high flow rates. Therefore, this study aims to compare high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy initiated upon operating room admission with conventional low-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy during cesarean section under spinal anesthesia, assessing their effects on maternal hemodynamic parameters and, ultimately, on fetal acid-base status.

Interventions

All patients will, upon admission to the operating room, be placed in the supine position and connected to standard monitoring. Once patient monitoring has been completed, patients in the high-flow nasal cannula oxygen group will receive 100% oxygen at 50 L/min via OptiFlow THRIVE. Thereafter, patients will be placed in the left lateral decubitus position, and spinal anesthesia will be performed at the lower lumbar level.

DEVICEconventional nasal cannula oxygen

All patients will, upon admission to the operating room, be placed in the supine position and connected to standard monitoring. Once patient monitoring has been completed, patients in the conventional nasal cannula oxygen group will receive oxygen at 2 L/min via a nasal cannula. Thereafter, patients will be placed in the left lateral decubitus position, and spinal anesthesia will be performed at the lower lumbar level.

Sponsors

Yonsei University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
FEMALE
Age
20 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Pregnant women aged 20 years or older with American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) physical status class 2-3 who are scheduled to undergo cesarean section under spinal anesthesia.

Exclusion criteria

A. Emergency surgery B. Patients in whom massive hemorrhage is anticipated, such as those with placenta previa C. Multiple pregnancy, preterm birth at less than 36 weeks of gestation, intrauterine growth restriction, or fetal anomalies D. History of hospitalization for preterm labor within the past 4 weeks requiring tocolytic therapy E. Respiratory diseases requiring oxygen therapy (e.g., moderate or severe asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) F. Individuals who are unable to read the consent form (e.g., illiterate individuals or foreigners who cannot read Korean)

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
umbilical arterial base deficit measured immediately after birth.Immediately after birth (i.e., approximately 1 minute after umbilical cord clamping)The attending obstetrician will obtain an umbilical arterial blood sample using a needle immediately after birth (immediately after umbilical cord clamping).

Contacts

CONTACTSeung Hyun Kim, Professor
anesshkim@yuhs.ac82-10-3292-2351

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Apr 8, 2026