This project has 2 phases. Phase 1: diagnostic test study, to evaluate the efficacy of the variation of pupillary size (PDR) to detect pain in ICU patients regarding to Behavioural Pain Scale (BPS) and ESCID (Conductual Scale Pain Index). Phase 2: controlled and aleatorized clinical trial to evaluate efficacy in PDR monitoring after painful assessed minimum stimulus with the best diagnostic efficiency on phase 1, as a need of analgesia indicator tool. The sample will be patients over 18 years, sedated and mechanically ventilated, with an initial BPS of 3, RASS between -1 and -4, not able not to communicate , with inform consent signed. Exclusion criteria will be: ophtalmologic pathology and administration of drugs interfering pupillary reflexes. Measurements before/during pain/non-pain situations, aspiration of secretions and calibrated intensity stimulus through the pupilometer Algiscan. The investigators will study association between pain according to BPS/ESCID and pupillary dilatation according to pupillometry and percentage of patients with pain and preanalgesia according to pupillometry and standard clinical practice.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
82
Measurements of pupillary dilatation with pupillometer to administer or not analgesia
Araba University hospital
Vitoria-Gasteiz, Álava, Spain
Propotion of patient with pain on experimental group versus control group
To compare the proprtion of patients with pain according to Behavioral Pain Scale (BPS), pupillometry and Scale of Behaviour Indicators of Pain (escid)
Time frame: An average of 1 year
Proportion of patient who require anesthesia on experimental group versus control group
The proportion of patients who require anesthesia on experimental group (previous analgesia according to pupillometry during endotracheal aspiration) versus control group (previous analgesia according to standard clinical practice).
Time frame: An average of 1 year
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