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To Investigate Airway Oxygen Concentrations During Rigid Bronchoscopy Procedures Performed With High Frequency Jet Ventilation
Sponsor: University of Minnesota
Summary
Thermal ablation (use of treatment modalities that generate heat) has become a widely used tool for treatment of central airway obstruction (e.g. laser, electrocautery, radiofrequency, and argon plasma coagulation). However, this method carries with it an increased risk for airway fire - a surgical fire that occurs in a patient's airway and could also include a fire in the attached breathing circuit. To decrease the risk of airway fire during mechanical ventilation with an endotracheal tube, the concentration of inspired oxygen (FiO2) is set below 40% while waiting for end tidal oxygen concentration (EtO2) to fall below 40% prior to starting thermal ablation. There is no published literature describing O2 concentration within the airways (AiO2) during jet ventilation with rigid bronchoscopy. The co-investigators of this study have recently collected data on AiO2 during rigid bronchoscopy using manual low frequency jet ventilation/high frequency jet ventilation with a period of apnea. The intent of this study is to measure the time taken for the central airway oxygen concentration to drop from 90 to 40% when the "laser mode" is activated on the Monsoon jet ventilator. Ventilation is continued during "laser mode."
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
50
Start Date
2024-01-12
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2026-01-07
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
No intervention
This is an observational study
Locations (1)
University of Minnesota
Minneapolis, Minnesota, United States