Sedation and analgesia are fundamental tools for managing critical patients who require mechanical ventilation. However, recent scientific literature highlights that excessive sedation in these patients can increase the duration of mechanical ventilation and extend the overall length of stay in intensive care, as well as expose them to a higher risk of hypotension, venous thrombosis, and nosocomial pneumonia. The titration of sedation and analgesia in intensive care, on the other hand, is currently based primarily on clinical parameters (such as the onset of delirium, asynchronies with the ventilator, for example), which can lead to treatments not proportionate to the patient's needs. The present study aims to evaluate the application, in an intensive care setting, of the Conox® system, a device already widely used in monitoring the anesthetic plan in the operating room. This tool would allow, through the processing of an EEG trace, the assessment of the level of sedation (qCON) and the probable algic response (qNOX), thus providing valuable information for the fine-tuning of the analgo-sedative plan.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
174
Sedation will be titrated according to the EEG derived indexes (qCON/qNOX)
Sedation will be provided according to the standard of care of the unit (clinical scales)
Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Sant'Anna
Ferrara, Italy, Italy
RECRUITINGAzienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Federico II - "Policlinico"
Naples, Napoli, Italy
NOT_YET_RECRUITINGVentilator free days
The number of days without ventilation
Time frame: Day 28
Delirium occurrence
Occurrence of delirium
Time frame: Daily after extubation
ICU lenght of stay
Lenght of stay in the intensive care unit
Time frame: ICU discharge
Drug consumption
Evaluation of sedative drug consumption during ICU stay
Time frame: ICU discharge
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