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NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT06956079
NA

Effect of End-inspiratory Pause on Gas Exchange During Mediastinal Mass Excision With CO2 Insufflation and One-lung Ventilation

Sponsor: Yonsei University

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

" Mediastinal mass excision is typically performed via video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery (VATS). To secure a clear surgical field, the ipsilateral lung must be deflated, achieved through one-lung ventilation (OLV) and intrathoracic CO₂ insufflation. However, OLV increases intrapulmonary shunt due to continued perfusion of the non-ventilated lung, potentially leading to hypoxemia and hypercapnia. When performed in the supine position, gas exchange becomes more challenging compared to lateral decubitus due to limited gravitational redistribution of blood flow. Although CO₂ insufflation aids surgical exposure through passive lung deflation, it may also increase CVP and PCWP, reduce cardiac output, and raise PaCO₂, contributing to respiratory acidosis. End-inspiratory pause (EIP), a ventilatory setting that pauses airflow at end-inspiration, prolongs alveolar gas exchange and improves ventilation-perfusion matching. Prior studies show EIP can enhance gas exchange, reduce microatelectasis, and improve CO₂ clearance in patients with acute lung injury. We therefore aimed to assess the effect of EIP application during VATS mediastinal mass excicion.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

20 Years - 80 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

58

Start Date

2025-05

Completion Date

2027-03-10

Last Updated

2025-05-02

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

PROCEDURE

EIP-first

EIP is applied for 20 minutes immediately after the initiation of one-lung ventilation, followed by conventional mechanical ventilation.

PROCEDURE

EIP-later

Conventional mechanical ventilation is applied for 20 minutes after the initiation of one-lung ventilation, followed by EIP application.

Locations (1)

Severance hospital

Seoul, South Korea