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Effect of reverse Trendelenburg position and positive pressure ventilation on safe non-hypoxic apnea period in obese, a randomized-control trial

PURPOSE: There is an elevated incidence of hypoxemia during the airway management of the morbidly obese. We aimed to assess whether optimizing body position and ventilation during pre-oxygenation allow a longer safe non-hypoxic apnea period (SNHAP). METHODS: Fifty morbidly obese patients were recrui...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Couture, Etienne J., Carrier-Boucher, Antony, Provencher, Steeve, Tanoubi, Issam, Marceau, Simon, Bussières, Jean S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10249289/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37291541
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12871-023-02128-7
Descripción
Sumario:PURPOSE: There is an elevated incidence of hypoxemia during the airway management of the morbidly obese. We aimed to assess whether optimizing body position and ventilation during pre-oxygenation allow a longer safe non-hypoxic apnea period (SNHAP). METHODS: Fifty morbidly obese patients were recruited and randomized for this study. Patients were positioned and preoxygenated for three minutes in the ramp position associated with spontaneous breathing without additional CPAP or PEEP (RP/ZEEP group) or in the reverse Trendelenburg position associated with pressure support ventilation mode with pressure support of 8 cmH(2)O and an additional 10 cmH(2)O of PEEP while breathing spontaneously (RT/PPV group) according to randomization. RESULTS: The SNHAP was significantly longer in the RT/PPV group (258.2 (55.1) vs. 216.7 (42.3) seconds, p = 0.005). The RT/PPV group was also associated to a shorter time to obtain a fractional end-tidal oxygen concentration (FEtO(2)) of 0.90 (85.1(47.8) vs 145.3(40.8) seconds, p < 0.0001), a higher proportion of patients that reached the satisfactory FEtO(2) of 0.90 (21/24, 88% vs. 13/24, 54%, p = 0.024), a higher FEtO(2) during preoxygenation (0.91(0.05) vs. 0.89(0.01), p = 0.003) and a faster return to 97% oxygen saturation after ventilation resumption (69.8 (24.2) vs. 91.4 (39.2) seconds, p = 0.038). CONCLUSION: In the morbidly obese population, RT/PPV, compared to RP/ZEEP, lengthens the SNHAP, decreases the time to obtain optimal preoxygenation conditions, and allows a faster resuming of secure oxygen saturation. The former combination allows a more significant margin of time for endotracheal intubation and minimizes the risk of hypoxemia in this highly vulnerable population. TRIAL REGISTRATION: NCT02590406, 29/10/2015.