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Protective mechanical ventilation in the transoperative period of orthognathic surgery in patients with cleft lip and palate

Protective mechanical ventilation in the transoperative period of orthognathic surgery in patients with cleft lip and palate: protocol development and evaluation of lung expansion

Status
Active, not recruiting
Phases
Unknown
Study type
Interventional
Source
REBEC
Registry ID
RBR-5z54y8j
Enrollment
Unknown
Registered
2023-09-19
Start date
2022-04-01
Completion date
Unknown
Last updated
2025-10-27

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

Conditions

Cleft Palate

Interventions

Will be included in this study 27 patients in preparation for orthognathic surgery, with repaired cleft lip and or palate. All patients must be operated on by the same oral and maxillofacial surgeon a

Sponsors

Hospital de Reabilitação de Anomalias Craniofaciais da Universidade de São Paulo
Lead Sponsor
Hospital de Reabilitação de Anomalias Craniofaciais da Universidade de São Paulo
Collaborator

Eligibility

Age
18 Years to 50 Years

Inclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria: Be aged between 18 and 50 years. Both sexes. Be in a position to perform orthognathic surgery, according to preoperative examinations and medical and surgical evaluation. No cognitive impairment, according to medical records. Not presenting any chronic pulmonary pathology pre-existing the surgery. No loss of blood volume greater than 1 liter. Do not exceed a Mechanical Ventilation time of more than 3 hours. No major intercurrences during the intraoperative period, such as bleeding, surgical time over 3 hours (180 minutes), airway difficult to intubate (malampat 4, short neck, deficiency in cervical extension); selective intubation

Exclusion criteria

Exclusion criteria: Patients who do not fit the inclusion items

Design outcomes

Secondary

MeasureTime frame
Secondary outcomes are not expected

Primary

MeasureTime frame
It is expected that the study will show which ventilatory modality is the most adequate for orthognathic surgeries. Analyzing both groups with different ventilation protocols, to determine which modality and protocol presents less loss when observing lung expansion at the end of surgery and also evaluate which presents less postoperative respiratory discomfort to the patient. The research also seeks to assess whether different protocols of mechanical ventilation can interfere with the volume of extravasated blood during surgery

Countries

Brazil

Contacts

Public ContactMaycon Rafael Jordão

Hospital de Reabilitação de Anomalias Craniofaciais da Universidade de São Paulo

mayconzanoni@gmail.com+55(14)3235-8421

Outcome results

None listed

Source: REBEC (via WHO ICTRP)