The effects of desflurane versus sevoflurane in adult patients undergoing LMA anesthesia on respiratory events during a less than 2-hour elective surgery.
Laryngeal Mask Airway (LMA) anesthesia is generally performed for ambulatory surgery to avoid the use of neuromuscular blocking agents and to facilitate rapid emergence from anesthesia. Inhaled anesthetics are simply and popularly used during maintenance of anesthesia. The two most recent volatile anesthetic agents, desflurane and sevoflurane, are the two most commonly used in clinical practice for an ambulatory setting. Desflurane is the volatile agent with low blood: gas partition coefficient (0.42). Desflurane's uptake and elimination from the body of a patient are rapid, which results in a fast onset of anesthesia and a fast recovery from anesthesia. This property provides desflurane as an ideal agent for the ambulatory anesthesia. However, its pungent odor is concerned to irritate the upper airway and may cause significant respiratory complications. Sevoflurane has a blood: gas partition coefficient of 0.65, which is slightly greater than desflurane. The major advantage over desflurane is the better scent. It is considered to be less airway irritation in LMA anesthesia with smooth induction and recovery. The limitation of desflurane on its odor leads to a controversy if desflurane is similar to or worse than sevoflurane for LMA anesthesia. This is non-inferiority study designed to compare the occurrence of respiratory complications between desflurane and sevoflurane during LMA anesthesia.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
220
Desflurane is the volatile agent with low blood: gas partition coefficient (0.42), its uptake and elimination from the body of a patient are rapid, which results in a fast onset of anesthesia and a fast recovery from anesthesia. This property provides desflurane as an ideal agent for the ambulatory anesthesia. However, its pungent odor is concerned to irritate the upper airway and may cause significant respiratory complications.
Sevoflurane has a blood: gas partition coefficient of 0.65, which is slightly greater than desflurane. The major advantage over desflurane is the better scented. It is considered to be less airway irritation in LMA anesthesia with smooth induction and recovery.
Chiang Mai University
Chiang Mai, Thailand
RECRUITINGChiang Mai University
Chiang Mai, Thailand
RECRUITINGOccurrence of respiratory complications
Respiratory complications are coughing, breath holding, laryngospasm, bronchospasm, and desaturation
Time frame: From the beginning of operation until 30 minutes after the operation
Time of eye opening
It is the time from discontinuation of anesthetic to the eye opening on verbal command.
Time frame: Within 30 minutes after the end of operation
Time to follow motor command
It is the time from discontinuation of anesthetic to hand squeezing.
Time frame: Within 30 minutes after the end of operation
Time of LMA removal
It is the time from discontinuation of anesthetic to removal of LMA.
Time frame: Within 30 minutes after the end of operation
Frequency of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV)
It is a number of patients with PONV in the early post-anesthetic period.
Time frame: Within 2 hours after operation
Changes of blood pressure during anesthesia
Non-invasive blood pressure will be recorded at the beginning of anesthesia, every 15 minutes during anesthetic maintenance, and at the time of LMA removal.
Time frame: Every 15 minutes, from the beginning of operation until 30 minutes after the operation
Changes of heart rate during anesthesia
Heart rate will be recorded at the beginning of anesthesia, every 15 minutes during anesthetic maintenance, and at the time of LMA removal.
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Time frame: Every 15 minutes, from the beginning of operation until 30 minutes after the operation