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The 90% Effective Ventilation Pressure (EP90) for Esophageal Insufflation Avoidance During Anesthesia Induction
Sponsor: Affiliated Hospital of Jiaxing University
Summary
Exploring the 90% Effective Ventilation Pressure (EP90) for Esophageal Insufflation Avoidance During Anesthesia Induction: The aim is to determine the optimal ventilation pressure for esophageal insufflation avoidance during anesthesia induction and to explore its guiding significance for anesthesia management. The goal is to provide a more precise and personalized ventilation pressure setting standard for clinical anesthesia, thereby enhancing the safety of the anesthesia induction phase.
Official title: The 90% Effective Ventilation Pressure (EP90) for Esophageal Insufflation Avoidance During Anesthesia Induction: A Bias-Coin Design With Up-and-Down Sequential Allocation Trial
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 65 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
60
Start Date
2025-09-29
Completion Date
2026-02
Last Updated
2026-01-14
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
Ultrasonic and inflation determination
Before induction, during ventilation, and after intubation, the anesthesiologist used a 7-14 MHz linear array probe for transverse (supraclavicular) positioning to monitor the left paratracheal esophageal region in real time. The main criterion for assessment was the absence of esophageal gas during ventilation, which was considered a positive response. If gas was detected entering the esophagus on ultrasound, it was recorded as a negative response. Additionally, the anesthesiologist performed a preoperative ultrasound examination of the gastric antrum to record baseline gastric antrum parameters. After successful tracheal intubation, a follow-up ultrasound of the gastric antrum was conducted to obtain postoperative gastric antrum parameters.
Locations (1)
Affiliated Hospital of Jiaxing University
Jiaxing, China