Effect of Tetanus on Neuromuscular Junction Monitor Performance in Pediatric Patients

NCT ID: NCT02498678

Last Updated: 2015-12-11

Study Results

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Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

COMPLETED

Clinical Phase

NA

Total Enrollment

50 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2014-01-31

Study Completion Date

2015-07-31

Brief Summary

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The objective of this study is to assess the performance of acceleromyography as a method of evaluation of muscle relaxation after application of tetanus stimulation to obtain stability of responses before administration of neuromuscular blocking agents.

Detailed Description

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Effect of tetanus on neuromuscular junction monitor performance in pediatric patients undergoing abdominal and / or perineal surgical procedures with the use of rocuronium.

Routine monitoring of neuromuscular function during anesthesia offers some advantages. It helps promote proper relaxation according to each patient's individual sensitivity and reduces the possibility of postoperative residual block with its serious consequences, namely: reducing pulmonary forced vital capacity, decreased ability to increase ventilation during periods of hypoxia, increased risk of pulmonary aspiration due to lower strength of pharyngeal muscles. It can also reduce the waste of time caused by excessive paralysis. Furthermore, the interpretation of data from the monitor may indicate that pharmacological reversal of neuromuscular blockade is not required, with potential benefits over costs, as well as lower incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting.

Acceleromyography was introduced for use in daily clinical practice in 1988 as a simple, reliable and easy to apply in the anesthetized patient monitor to assess muscle relaxation. The purpose of this neuromuscular junction (NMJ) monitor was replace mechanomyography, this modality that has greater complexity of assembling and using. The mechanomyography was considered long, the ideal objective neuromuscular monitoring. This measures the strength of isometric contraction of a muscle or digit (e.g. thumb) in response to nerve stimulation. Moreover, it requires an assembly that demands time and with strict rules for the positioning and application of non elastic preload on the thumb. This makes the method impractical for everyday use. Furthermore, monitors based on the method of mechanomyography are no longer commercially available. Acceleromyography gradually replaced mechanomyography as a method to monitor muscle relaxation in clinical practice and research.

Acceleromyography measures the acceleration (isotonic contraction) of a muscle or finger. The method is based on Newton's second law, which states that force is equal to the product of mass and acceleration. If the mass (e.g. thumb) is constant, the acceleration is directly proportional to the force. This means, in principle, it measures the unrestricted movement of the muscle in question.

Monitoring must present a stable response (baseline) for a period of 2 to 5 minutes before administration of neuromuscular blocker. The time required to reach this stable response depends on the duration of electrical stimulation and frequency in which electrical stimulation are applied. When using single mode stimulus at a frequency of 0.1 Hertz (Hz) or train-of-four (TOF) every 12 to 15 seconds, it may take 5 to 20 minutes to obtain a stable response. However, the stabilization period may be shortened by applying a short, high frequency stimulation (tetanic stimulation). Tetanic stimulation for 5 seconds can decrease the stabilization period of 2 to 5 minutes.

There is no description in the literature on the performance of tetanus stimulation in obtaining a stable response of the monitor neuromuscular junction in pediatric patients.

The objective of this study is to assess the performance of acceleromyography as a method of evaluation of muscle relaxation after application of tetanus stimulation to obtain stability of responses before administration of neuromuscular blocking agents. This performance will be compared by time of onset and recovery, recorded by the monitor during effect of neuromuscular blocking agent rocuronium; namely:

* Onset of action (height reduction of 95% in T1);
* Time to reappearance of T1, T2, T3 and T4;
* Time to TOF reaching 0.20; 0.30; 0.40; 0.50; 0.60; 0.70; 0.80; 0.90;
* Recovery interval 25-75 (elapsed time between T1 25% and T1 75%)
* Final T1 height

Materials and Methods Patient After obtaining approval by the Ethics Committee and informed consent by completing legal guardian, 50 patients (American Society of Anesthesiologists \[ASA\] - Physical Status 1-2, aged 2 to 11 years, regardless of genders) who will undergo abdominal and / or perineal surgery, with planned surgical time greater than 60 minutes will be included in the study. Patients with diseases or medications that are known to interfere with neuromuscular transmission, hepatic or renal dysfunction or allergy to medications used in the study will be excluded.

Anesthesia Patients will be monitored with electrocardiography, noninvasive blood pressure, pulse oximetry, capnography, gas analyzer and bispectral index. The anesthesia is induced with inhaled (sevoflurane) or intravenous (propofol and opioids) anesthetics according to the patient's ability to cooperate in obtaining venous access. The maintenance will be done with intravenous anesthesia (propofol and opioid). Peripheral temperature will be measured at the thenar eminence of the upper limb where the monitor will be installed and maintained above 32 degrees Celsius. The core temperature will be monitored in the esophagus and maintained above 35 degrees Celsius. All patients will be placed under a upper body forced air warming blanket. The trachea will be intubated without the use of muscle relaxant. Ventilation will be adjusted to maintain normocapnia (end tidal carbon dioxide 32 - 40 mmHg). Before the study began, if inhaled agents have been used for induction of anesthesia, the absence will be established by the gas analysis monitor.

Neuromuscular monitoring

Neuromuscular monitoring will follow the recommendations of good practice in research for pharmacodynamic studies of neuromuscular blocking agents. After careful cleaning of the skin, two pediatric surface electrodes will be placed in one of the upper limbs on the ulnar nerve near the wrist with a distance of 3 to 6 centimeters (cm). Upper limb and fingers will be fixed to appropriate support. The acceleromyography monitor (TOF-Watch®, Organon) will be installed on this member. Using a system of random numbers generated by computer and stored in sealed, opaque envelopes, patients will be placed in one of the following groups:

Tetanus group (n = 25) After verifying the absence of sevoflurane through the gas analyzer, a 50-Hz tetanic stimulation will be applied for 5 s and followed after 1 min by TOF stimulation every 15 s. When the response to TOF is stable, calibration and supramaximal stimulation will be ensured by the built-in calibration function (CAL 2) of the TOF-Watch®.

Control group (n = 25) After verifying the absence of sevoflurane through the gas analyzer, TOF monitor mode starts with stimuli every 12 to 15 seconds. After 1 minute (min) stimulation in the form, calibration and supramaximal stimulation will be ensured by the built-in calibration function (CAL 2) of the TOF-Watch®. If greater than 5% variation in the height of the first response (T1) of the TOF monitor will be recalibrated.

In both groups, the stability of the response will be documented by at least 2 to 5 min \[\<5% variation in the first response (T1) in the TOF\] before administration of rocuronium.

The IV line will be inserted in the contralateral arm. The choice between the dominant and non-dominant arm will be made randomly. The dose of 0,6 milligram / kilogram of rocuronium will be administered in fast-running saline infusion within 5 seconds. The data of the TOF-Watch® monitor will be collected on a laptop using the neuromuscular junction program monitor. If needed, neuromuscular blockade will be reversed with neostigmine and atropine.

Sample Size Based on the previous study, the mean blocking time to reach TOF 0.9 is averaging 42.8 minutes, the variability from one patient to another was 9 minutes (SD = 9 minutes). (9) It is expected that, using tetanus, the average blocking time will not be less than 35 minutes on average. With 80% power and 95% confidence the sample required for conducting the study is 21 patients in each group.

Statistical Analysis Recovery times from neuromuscular blockade will be assessed between groups up to the value of TOF = 0.90. For quantitative evaluation of these parameters will be employed Student's t test or the Mann-Whitney test.

The sensitivity, parameter set automatically by the monitor, will be compared between groups. As it is also a quantitative parameter, the Student's t test or the Mann-Whitney test will be used.

Conditions

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Muscle Relaxation

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

SUPPORTIVE_CARE

Blinding Strategy

NONE

Study Groups

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control group

After verifying the absence of sevoflurane through the gas analyzer, TOF monitor mode starts with stimuli every 12 to 15 seconds. After 1 minute (min) stimulation, calibration and supramaximal stimulation will be ensured by the built-in calibration function (CAL 2) of the TOF-Watch®. The stability of the response will be documented by at least 2 to 5 min \[\< 5% variation in the first response (T1) in the TOF\]. Monitoring of neuromuscular junction will be held until recovery of the TOF ratio to 0.9 (90%), an expected average of 60 minutes.

Group Type NO_INTERVENTION

No interventions assigned to this group

tetanus group

After verifying the absence of sevoflurane through the gas analyzer, a 50-Hz tetanic stimulation will be applied for 5 s and followed after 1 min by TOF stimulation every 15 s. After 1 minute (min) calibration and supramaximal stimulation will be ensured by the built-in calibration function (CAL 2) of the TOF-Watch®. The stability of the response will be documented by at least 2 to 5 min \[\< 5% variation in the first response (T1) in the TOF\]. Monitoring of neuromuscular junction will be held until recovery of the TOF ratio to 0.9 (90%), an expected average of 60 minutes.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

Tetanus

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

tetanic electric stimulation

Interventions

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Tetanus

tetanic electric stimulation

Intervention Type PROCEDURE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Physical Status 1-2, aged 2 to 11 years, regardless of genders) who will undergo abdominal and / or perineal surgery, with planned surgical time greater than 60 minutes

Exclusion Criteria

* Patients with diseases or medications that are known to interfere with neuromuscular transmission, hepatic or renal dysfunction or allergy to medications used in the study will be excluded
Minimum Eligible Age

2 Years

Maximum Eligible Age

11 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Sponsors

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University of Sao Paulo General Hospital

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Ricardo Vieira Carlos

Staff Physician

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Principal Investigators

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Marcelo LA Torres, Prof.

Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR

Disciplina de Anestesiologia da FMUSP

Locations

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Child Institute

São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil

Site Status

Countries

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Brazil

References

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Carlos RV, de Boer HD, Torres ML, Carmona MJ. The effect of prior tetanic stimulation on train-of-four monitoring in paediatric patients: A randomised open-label controlled trial. Eur J Anaesthesiol. 2017 Mar;34(3):163-168. doi: 10.1097/EJA.0000000000000558.

Reference Type DERIVED
PMID: 27828786 (View on PubMed)

Other Identifiers

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22225014.7.0000.0068

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id