Interest of a Period of Fasting Before Extubation in Resuscitation Patients

  • STATUS
    Recruiting
  • participants needed
    100
  • sponsor
    Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon
Updated on 19 February 2024
opioid
anesthesia
shock
resuscitation
mechanical ventilation
fasting
sedative
catecholamines
extubation
opioids
enteral nutrition
antral
tracheal extubation
polytrauma
gastric ultrasound
pain or discomfort

Summary

Orotracheal extubation in resuscitation is a situation in which there is an elevated risk of inhalation. In resuscitation, enteral nutrition that is administered in a continuous flow is likely to accumulate in the stomach. Gastric motility in resuscitation patients may be impaired for many reasons:

  • Iatrogenic: Catecholamines, sedatives and opioids slow down the digestive system and decrease the tone of the lower esophageal sphincter
  • Shock, polytrauma, sepsis, pain or discomfort, or mechanical ventilation again create an alteration in gastric emptying.

Enteral nutrition is commonly discontinued to manage extubation, but it is not systematic. Discontinuation leads to a decrease in caloric intake.

Gastric ultrasound is a minimally invasive, reliable and promising means of monitoring that allows the stomach to be visualized directly. Studies on healthy subjects and in anaesthesia have made it possible to validate ultrasound in the context of the study of gastric content using both quantitative (including measurement of the antral area) and qualitative criteria. Measurement of the antral area was also studied in resuscitation. Antral area and gastric volume are closely related, with a correlation coefficient ranging from 0.6 to 0.91.

Identifying patients at risk of inhalation by ultrasound could allow individualized enteral nutrition management prior to extubation in the resuscitation unit, and thus optimize nutritional management.

The objective of the study is to identify factors associated with greated antral area in patients hospitalized in the intensive care unit. The hypothesis is that continued enteral nutrition before extubation is associated with increased gastric volume as measured by ultrasound.

Details
Condition intensive care, Extubation
Age 18years - 100years
Treatment gastric ultrasound
Clinical Study IdentifierNCT04245878
SponsorCentre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon
Last Modified on19 February 2024

Eligibility

Yes No Not Sure

Inclusion Criteria

Person or next of kin/designated representative has provided his or her non-opposition
Patient in medical or surgical intensive care, admitted for an urgent medical or surgical reason and for whom extubation have been planned by the practitioner in charge of the patient

Exclusion Criteria

Person subject to legal protection (guardianship, trusteeship)
Person subject to a justice safeguard measure
Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding woman
Minor
Anechoic patient or patient without an exploitable ultrasound window
History of gastric or esophageal surgery
Limitation of Care (LOC) order
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