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High-flow nasal oxygen vs. standard oxygen therapy for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with conscious sedation: a randomised controlled trial
by
Martinez, G.
, Govender, P.
, Mckie, M.
, Pack, J.
, George, S.
, Falter, F.
, Tan, A.
, A. Klein, A.
, Scheuermann, S.
in
Anesthesia
/ Cardiac surgery
/ Cardiology
/ Care and treatment
/ Catheters
/ Clinical trials
/ Comorbidity
/ Comparative analysis
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart valve diseases
/ High-flow nasal oxygen
/ Human Physiology
/ Intensive
/ Length of stay
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Minimally invasive surgery
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen therapy
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Peri-operative care
/ Sedation
/ Surgery
/ Veins & arteries
2023
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High-flow nasal oxygen vs. standard oxygen therapy for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with conscious sedation: a randomised controlled trial
by
Martinez, G.
, Govender, P.
, Mckie, M.
, Pack, J.
, George, S.
, Falter, F.
, Tan, A.
, A. Klein, A.
, Scheuermann, S.
in
Anesthesia
/ Cardiac surgery
/ Cardiology
/ Care and treatment
/ Catheters
/ Clinical trials
/ Comorbidity
/ Comparative analysis
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart valve diseases
/ High-flow nasal oxygen
/ Human Physiology
/ Intensive
/ Length of stay
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Minimally invasive surgery
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen therapy
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Peri-operative care
/ Sedation
/ Surgery
/ Veins & arteries
2023
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High-flow nasal oxygen vs. standard oxygen therapy for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with conscious sedation: a randomised controlled trial
by
Martinez, G.
, Govender, P.
, Mckie, M.
, Pack, J.
, George, S.
, Falter, F.
, Tan, A.
, A. Klein, A.
, Scheuermann, S.
in
Anesthesia
/ Cardiac surgery
/ Cardiology
/ Care and treatment
/ Catheters
/ Clinical trials
/ Comorbidity
/ Comparative analysis
/ Critical Care Medicine
/ Emergency Medicine
/ Heart valve diseases
/ High-flow nasal oxygen
/ Human Physiology
/ Intensive
/ Length of stay
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Minimally invasive surgery
/ Oxygen
/ Oxygen therapy
/ Patient satisfaction
/ Peri-operative care
/ Sedation
/ Surgery
/ Veins & arteries
2023
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High-flow nasal oxygen vs. standard oxygen therapy for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with conscious sedation: a randomised controlled trial
Journal Article
High-flow nasal oxygen vs. standard oxygen therapy for patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement with conscious sedation: a randomised controlled trial
2023
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Overview
Background
Minimally invasive surgery is becoming more common and transfemoral transcatheter aortic valve replacement is offered to older patients with multiple comorbidities. Sternotomy is not required but patients must lie flat and still for up to 2–3 h. This procedure is increasingly being performed under conscious sedation with supplementary oxygen, but hypoxia and agitation are commonly observed.
Methods
In this randomised controlled trial, we hypothesised that high-flow nasal oxygen would provide superior oxygenation as compared with our standard practice, 2 l min
−1
oxygen by dry nasal specs. This was administered using the Optiflow THRIVE Nasal High Flow delivery system (Fisher and Paykel, Auckland, New Zealand) at a flow rate of 50 l min
−1
and FiO
2
0.3. The primary endpoint was the change in arterial partial pressure of oxygen (pO
2
) during the procedure. Secondary outcomes included the incidence of oxygen desaturation, airway interventions, the number of times the patient reached for the oxygen delivery device, incidence of cerebral desaturation, peri-operative oxygen therapy duration, hospital length of stay and patient satisfaction scores.
Results
A total of 72 patients were recruited. There was no difference in change in pO
2
from baseline using high-flow compared with standard oxygen therapy: median [IQR] increase from 12.10 (10.05–15.22 [7.2–29.8]) to 13.69 (10.85–18.38 [8.5–32.3]) kPa vs. decrease from 15.45 (12.17–19.33 [9.2–22.8]) to 14.20 (11.80–19.40 [9.7–35.1]) kPa, respectively. The percentage change in pO2 after 30 min was also not significantly different between the two groups (
p
= 0.171). There was a lower incidence of oxygen desaturation in the high-flow group (
p
= 0.027). Patients in the high-flow group assigned a significantly higher comfort score to their treatment (
p
≤ 0.001).
Conclusion
This study has demonstrated that high flow, compared with standard oxygen therapy, does not improve arterial oxygenation over the course of the procedure. There are suggestions that it may improve the secondary outcomes studied.
Trial registration
International Standard Randomised Controlled Trial Number (ISRCTN) 13,804,861. Registered on 15 April 2019.
https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN13804861
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