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Cardiac Performance During Steep Trendelenburg Position in Patients Undergoing Robotic Surgery Surgery.
Sponsor: Karlstad Central Hospital
Summary
The field of robotic-assisted laparoscopic surgery increases all the time. Older and more fragile patients which are not suitable for major open surgery could be scheduled for robotic- assisted surgery. The peroperative anesthesiological challenges and stresses during this type of surgery could anyway be even more prominent. The extreme positioning of patients during robotic surgery in the pelvis, often 30 degrees head down tilting (Trendelenburg positioning), should increase the work load of the heart significantly. There are no studies concerning fragile patients with heart failure during these conditions. In this study the circulatory effects in patients with normal heart function and preexisting heart failure will be studied during robotic surgery in extreme Trendelenburg positioning During surgery the work load and performance of the heart will be monitored using an esophageal doppler and optical spectrophotometry measuring regional saturation of the brain. This study can identify patients at risk of developing critical circulatory failure during this type of surgery.
Official title: Effects of Steep Trendelenburg and Pneumoperitoneum on Cardiac Performance During Robotic-assisted Surgery in Patients With Normal and Low Ejection Fraction.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
80
Start Date
2024-11-21
Completion Date
2026-12-31
Last Updated
2026-02-12
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Esophageal Doppler
Esophageal Doppler: measuring cardiac performance. INVOS: measuring regional saturation of the brain.
Locations (1)
Dpt of Anesthesiology&Intensive Care; Central Hospital of Karlstad
Karlstad, Värmland County, Sweden