At a glance
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Adjunctive Nitrous Oxide During Emergency Department Propofol Sedation in Adults, a Pilot Study
In Brief
A clinical study evaluating Nitrous Oxide arm, Propofol, and 1 other intervention for Joint Dislocation and 2 related conditions. Completed, enrolled 43 participants across 1 site.
Detailed Summary
The purpose of this study is to describe the safety and efficacy of nitrous oxide administration for pain and anxiety before propofol in patients requiring any procedure under sedation in the Emergency Department. Procedural sedation is the use of sedative, analgesic, and/or dissociative agents to relieve anxiety and pain associated with diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Propofol is commonly used and is a sedative and amnestic, but provides no analgesia. Short acting opioids may be used for pain relief, but come with the risk of respiratory depression. An optimum analgesic to relieve pain in patients who need procedural sedation should be short acting, easy to administer and safe. Nitrous oxide may be a suitable agent, but literature supporting or rejecting its use in adults is lacking. This study aims to fill this gap. Adult patients capable of consenting, coming to the Emergency Department with painful condition requiring procedural sedation are the targeted population. Eligible patients who consent to the study will receive Nitrous Oxide gas delivered through a hand held mask before they receive propofol for the procedure. Information regarding their vitals, pain scores and medical condition will also be collected.
Study Details
Timeline
Interventions
Patients undergoing procedural sedation with propofol will undergo an initial medical assessment including the history, physical examination, and vital signs. The patients will then receive Nitrous Oxide gas via a gas mixer device before receiving propofol. The device will mix and deliver nitrous oxide and oxygen in a 1:1 ratio, at a fixed concentration of 50%/50%. The on demand valve requires patient inspiration to trigger dosing.
The loading dose of propofol will be administered immediately after nitrous oxide discontinuation. All sedations in this trial will use propofol 1.0 mg/Kg initial dose, with 0.5 mg/Kg doses titrated to deep sedation. Once the patient is deeply sedated, the procedure will begin.
If pulse oximetry declines to less than 92%, subject will be placed on nasal cannula with administration of 2 liter flow of oxygen and titrated in increments of 1 L flow to maintain pulse oximetry greater than 92%