Peri-operative fluid-therapy is extremely important in thoracic surgery, because excessive administration of fluids during one-lung ventilation is correlated to an increasing risk of postoperative respiratory complications. Therefore, current guidelines on peri-operative management of patients undergoing thoracic surgery suggest a conservative fluid management strategy, based on intra-operative fluid loss replacement and maintenance of euvolemia. Nevertheless, intra-operative fluid loss estimation and consequently the correct infusion rate adoption are quite difficult to be addressed in clinical practice, and this often prevents the euvolemia maintenance in the peri-operative period. This limit claims the necessity to adopt new methods of fluid-therapy administration in thoracic surgery; among these the most promising is the "Goal-Directed Therapy" (GDT). GDT protocols based on Stroke Volume Variation (SVV) or Pulse Pressure Variation (PPV) monitoring have been adopted successfully in major and cardiac surgery but not yet in thoracic surgery. The aim of this randomized study is to evaluate the effects of a PPV-GDT fluid management protocol versus a conservative "zero-balance" protocol on intrapulmonary gas exchanges, in patients undergoing single-lung ventilation during thoracic surgery.
The intra-operative fluid-therapy (using lactated Ringer) will be based on pulse pressure variation (PPV group) with a target ≤5.8% or on compensation (1:1) of urine output (zero balance group). In both groups an intraoperative background infusion of lactated Ringer at 1-2 ml/kg/h will be administered.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
88
fluid-therapy based on PPV monitoring
fluid-therapy based on urinary output balance
UOC Anestesia delle Chirurgie Generali e dei Trapianti, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS
Rome, Lazio/Rome, Italy
RECRUITINGPaO2/FiO2 ratio
Ratio of arterial oxygen partial pressure (PaO2 in mmHg) to fraction of inspired oxygen (FiO2)
Time frame: 15 minutes after extubation
Postoperative pulmonary complications
e.g. Atelectasis, pneumonia, lung edema, pleural effusion, hypoxemia
Time frame: Up to 3 days after surgery
In-hospital stay
Hospital stay duration
Time frame: Days until discharge, an average of 5 days
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