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NCT03212482

Patient-ventilator Asynchrony in Patients With Brain Injury

Completed Last updated 29 May 2020
What this trial tests

trial in Brain Injuries in 100 participants. Completed in 29 February 2020.

Timeline
15 June 2017
Primary endpoint
1 July 2019
29 February 2020

Quick facts

Lead sponsorJian-Xin Zhou
StatusCompleted
Study typeOBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment100
Start date15 June 2017
Primary completion1 July 2019
Estimated completion29 February 2020
Sites1 location across China

Conditions studied

Sponsor

Jian-Xin Zhou

Who can join

18 and older, any sex, with Brain Injuries or Mechanical Ventilation. Patients with the condition only — healthy volunteers not accepted.

Sponsor's own description

Mechanical ventilation is an important support strategy for critically ill patients. It could improve gas exchange, reduce the work of breathing, and improve patient comfort. However, patient-ventilator asynchrony, which defined as a mismatch between the patient and ventilator may obfuscate these goals. Studies have shown that a high incidence of asynchrony (asynchrony index \> 10%) is associated with prolonged mechanical ventilation and ICU length of stay and high mortality. So far, there have been only a few studies on the epidemiology of asynchrony in brain-injured patients. Investigators conduct a prospective observational study among brain-injured patients to determine the prevalence, risk factors and outcomes of patient-ventilator asynchrony. Esophageal pressure monitoring, a surrogate for pleural pressure, combined with airway pressure and flow waveforms is used to detect patient-ventilator asynchrony.

Publications & conference data

5 peer-reviewed publications reference this trial (live from Europe PMC):

  1. Patient-ventilator asynchrony in acute brain-injured patients: a prospective observational study.
    Luo XY, He X, Zhou YM, Wang YM, et al · · 2020 · cited 15× · PMID 33074406 · DOI 10.1186/s13613-020-00763-8
  2. Validation of the flow index to detect low inspiratory effort during pressure support ventilation.
    Miao MY, Chen W, Zhou YM, Gao R, et al · · 2022 · cited 13× · PMID 36161543 · DOI 10.1186/s13613-022-01063-z
  3. ESICM LIVES 2019 : Berlin, Germany. 28 September - 2 October 2019.
    · 2019 · cited 8× · PMID 31559498 · DOI 10.1186/s40635-019-0265-y
  4. Ineffective Effort in Patients With Acute Brain Injury Undergoing Invasive Mechanical Ventilation.
    Luo XY, He X, Zhou YM, Zhou JF, et al · · 2023 · cited 4× · PMID 36997326 · DOI 10.4187/respcare.10596
  5. Reverse triggering in patients with acute brain injury undergoing controlled ventilation.
    Luo XY, Zhou YM, Zhou J, He X, et al · · 2024 · PMID 39552855 · DOI 10.21037/jtd-24-694

Verify or expand the search:

Other recruiting trials for Brain Injuries

Currently open trials in the same condition.

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Data sources for this page

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