Extubation in Pediatric Patients: An Observational Study
NCT02963532 · Status: COMPLETED · Type: OBSERVATIONAL · Enrollment: 600
Last updated 2018-01-08
Summary
The timing of extubation following surgery and anesthesia in young children is a complex decision frequently guided by the experience of the clinician. The clinician frequently must make a decision based on assimilating multiple cues that may or may not demonstrate that the patient is ready for extubation such as eye opening, conjugate gaze, spontaneous ventilation, and end tidal agent concentration. At this time there is no published data on the predictive ability of individual extubation criteria for young patients undergoing anesthesia for surgery so most practice is based solely on experience and anecdotal teaching. In some cases if the timing is misjudged and the patient is extubated too early negative airway reflexes such as breath holding and laryngospasm may take over creating a critical situation in which the patient forgoes gas exchange and rapidly desaturates with the potential for bradycardia and further cardiovascular collapse.
Routine criteria used to determine fitness for extubation have been primarily described in the intensive care unit literature and may be less relevant in the operating room in the setting of routine general anesthetics. Most predictors including adequate tidal volume, presence of conjugate gaze, eye opening, patient movement purposeful or otherwise, low end tidal anesthetic agent concentration, response to physical or verbal stimulation and the laryngeal stimulation test have not previously been evaluated to determine their individual predictive value in deciding if the presently anesthetized patient now emerging is ready to be extubated.
In order to perform a laryngeal stimulation test the patient must be breathing spontaneously and practitioner will gently move the endotracheal tube up and down stimulating the larynx. In patients in stage 2 of anesthesia, the clinician will typically observe a cough or series of coughs followed by a respiratory pause of greater than 5 seconds. In this situation the patient has not adequately passed through stage 2 and remains at increased risk for apnea, breath holding, or laryngospasm. If the patient is in stage 1 of anesthesia the clinician will observe a cough followed by a brief pause (less than 5 seconds) or almost immediate return to spontaneous ventilation.
In conclusion, their exist no quantitative data on the predictive value of these various criteria for extubation and the goal of our study is determine the indivdual predictive value of different criteria in determing fitness for extubaion in young pediatric patients by recording the presence or absence of various criteria in pediatric patients at the time of extubation during routine anesthetic care.
Conditions
- Anesthesia, Pediatric
Interventions
- OTHER
-
We are observing criteria present at extubation
We will not be performing any intervention. We will only be observing what clinical data is present at the time of extubation and how predictive are different pieces of clinical data.
Sponsors & Collaborators
-
Wake Forest University Health Sciences
lead OTHER
Principal Investigators
-
Thomas Templeton, MD · Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Eligibility
- Min Age
- 1 Month
- Max Age
- 7 Years
- Sex
- ALL
- Healthy Volunteers
- No
Timeline & Regulatory
- Start
- 2016-12-31
- Primary Completion
- 2017-12-04
- Completion
- 2017-12-04
Countries
- United States
Study Locations
More Related Trials
-
Changes in Pulmonary Ventilation Distribution Assessed by Electrical Impedance Tomography in Healthy Children Under General Anesthesia
NCT06262360 ·Status: RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
Tube Tip Position in Orally Intubated 0-4year Old Children: Assessment of the Precision of Two Clinical Techniques
NCT01156233 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Extubation in Pediatric Patients: Proactive or Passive?
NCT04432701 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Lung Recruitment Maneuver as a Potential Predictor of Fluid Responsiveness in Mechanically Ventilated Pediatric Patients
NCT03431064 ·Status: RECRUITING
-
Effectiveness of the Routine Use of Extubation Protocol on the Incidence of Occurrence of Failures Number of Extubation in Pediatric Resuscitation
NCT03129815 ·Status: UNKNOWN
-
Respiratory Management of Children Under Anaesthesia
NCT04020900 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Implementation of an Analgesia-sedation Algorithm in the Pediatric ICU to Reduce Benzodiazepine Use
NCT04263662 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Individualized Positive End-expiratory Pressure Evaluation Using the Intratidal Compliance-volume Profile in Children
NCT03533296 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Reduce Pediatric Sedation to Reduce Mechanical Ventilation Complication in ICU
NCT02040168 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Difficult Airway Prediction in Paediatric Anaesthesia
NCT03404453 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Just-In-Time Rapid Cycle Deliberate Practice Simulation Intubation Training Among Novice Pediatric Anesthesia Trainees: A Randomized Control Study
NCT04472195 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Apneic Oxygenation in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit
NCT03374046 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Head Position for Laryngeal Mask Air Leak and Performance in Paediatric Patients (Neutral, Sniffing and Beyond Sniffing Position)
NCT05035264 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Apnoeic Oxygenation During Pediatric Tracheal Intubation
NCT06576596 ·Status: RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
CPAP and Lateral Neck Rotation on Anesthetized Children
NCT00592423 ·Status: TERMINATED ·Phase: NA
-
Optimal PEEP in Pediatric Patients Under 17 Years of Age.
NCT05726877 ·Status: UNKNOWN ·Phase: NA
-
Application of HFNC for the Prevention of Hypoxemia During Perioperative Anesthetic-induced Intubation in Children: A Randomized Controlled Clinical Trial
NCT06425406 ·Status: RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
Effects of Pneumoperitoneum on Dynamic Alveolar Stress-strain in Anesthetized Pediatric Patients
NCT04183309 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Post-extubation Use RAM Cannula Versus Short Binasal Prong Interfaces in Preterm Infants
NCT07113535 ·Status: NOT_YET_RECRUITING ·Phase: NA
-
Comparison of Tidal Volume Between Pediatric Anaesthesia and Paediatric Intensive Care Patients
NCT03877354 ·Status: UNKNOWN
-
The Utility of Pretracheal Stethoscope in Detecting Respiratory Abnormalities in Sedated Children
NCT01957566 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Nasal High Frequency Ventilation in Preterm Infants: A Pilot Study
NCT00296231 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: PHASE1
-
Sedation Management in Pediatric Patients With Acute Respiratory Failure (The RESTORE Study)
NCT00814099 ·Status: COMPLETED ·Phase: NA
-
Implementation and Evaluation of a Pediatric Nurse-driven Sedation Protocol in a PICU
NCT02829710 ·Status: COMPLETED
-
Incidence and Risk Factors of Extubation Failure in Pediatric Resuscitation
NCT03129802 ·Status: UNKNOWN