Opioid administration in mechanically ventilated patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) is essential to maintaining patient respiratory and hemodynamic stability. Mechanical ventilation is a persistently nociceptive event that can continuously causes discomfort in the trachealy intubated patient. This can lead to patient-ventilator dyssynchrony, tachycardia, hypertension, and their associated complications. Opioids blunt respiratory drive, which facilitates mechanical ventilation, and decrease the sympathetic response to nociception. However, excessive opiate administration is associated with many adverse events, including respiratory depression, delirium, ileus, nausea, and vomiting. Currently, the standard administration in our institution of sufentanil, a potent opiate, consists of continuous infusions of 0.15µg/kg/h to 0.3µg/kg/h. Mechanically ventilated patients are unable to speak and are often sedated. This greatly impacts the patient's capacity to communicate pain. The use of a nociceptive monitor may be a possible solution. Skin conductance monitoring (Pain Monitor, Med-Storm, Norway), measures the peaks per second of electrical conduction. This non hemodynamic monitor uses skin conduction as a surrogate to nociception (i.e., the patient's unconscious response to a noxious stimulus). It may consequently guide opioid administration in ICU patients towards and avoid the consequences of excessive or inadequate antinociception.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
30
The value of skin conductance guides the titration of sufentanil
The intensive care team titrates antinociception based on their standard approach (using a clinical approach by assessing blood pressure, heart rate, and ventilator dyssynchrony).
Concentration of sufentanil requirements
Sufentanil requirements (µg/kg/h)
Time frame: one day to 2 weeks
Concentration of propofol requirements
Propofol requirements (mg/kg/h)
Time frame: one day to 2 weeks
Concentration of noradrenaline requirements (concentration of)
noradrenaline requirements (µg/kg/min)
Time frame: one day to 2 weeks
Intubation time
Total time of mechanical ventilation (intubated)
Time frame: one day to 2 weeks
Composite post extubation related complications
post extubation opioid related complications (e.g., delirium, vomiting, nausea, ileus, respiratory acidosis, hypoxemia, reintubation).
Time frame: one day to 2 weeks
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