Comfort evaluation is one of the major challenges in the palliative care setting, particularly when it comes to non-communicative patients. ANI monitoring is a non-invasive and painless technique which evaluates the parasympathetic tone activity through heart rate variability. It has proven reliable for pain assessment during general anesthesia (GA) or for sedated critically ill patients. The parasympathetic activity seems to be a good reflect of the patient's comfort, implicating stress and anxiety. So, the ANI could be an interesting tool to assess the comfort of non-communicating end-of-life patients. That is why the goal of our study is to assess the interest of ANI to assess the comfort of non-communicating patients hospitalized in palliative care during a painful care by comparing the ANI measure to the CPOT scale realised by the nurses in a blind manner.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
20
Pain measurement during care procedures in palliative care
Hop Cardiologique Chu Lille
Lille, France
Variation of the ANI between before the care and during the care
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
Variation of the ANI between during the care and after the care
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
Coefficient of correlation between the variation of the ANI and the variation of the CPOT scale between each periods.
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
Coefficient of correlation between the minANI and the CPOT scale for each periods
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
Coefficient of correlations between ANImin and CPOT values before, during, and after the painful care session
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
The discriminatory power of the ANI to separate the non-comfortable and the comfortable population defined by a ≤ 2 threshold on the CPOT scale
Time frame: From 10 minutes before the care to 10 minutes after the care
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