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Electrical Impedance Tomography-Guided Identification of the Optimal Lateral Position in Postoperative ARDS
Sponsor: Ruijin Hospital
Summary
This prospective, randomized crossover physiological study evaluates the effects of lateral positioning (left lateral position and right lateral position) versus the supine position on ventilation-perfusion (V/Q) matching in adult postoperative abdominal surgery participants with acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). Bedside electrical impedance tomography (EIT) will be used to quantify regional ventilation and perfusion (perfusion derived from an intravenous tracer bolus administered during a brief breath-hold) and to calculate global "normal V/Q" (normal V/Q, %). Oxygenation, respiratory mechanics (when applicable), and hemodynamics will be recorded concurrently. Feasibility and safety of the positioning protocol will also be assessed.
Official title: Effect of Left Lateral, Right Lateral, and Supine Positioning on Ventilation-Perfusion Matching Assessed by Electrical Impedance Tomography in Adult Postoperative Abdominal Surgery Patients With ARDS: A Prospective Randomized Crossover Physiological Study
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
24
Start Date
2026-06-16
Completion Date
2026-10-31
Last Updated
2026-06-25
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Positioning Intervention
Using a randomized crossover design, all subjects undergo three body position stages in random order. Each position (supine, left lateral, right lateral) is maintained for 60 minutes. Vital signs are stabilized per protocol, followed by EIT assessment of ventilation-perfusion matching. 1. Position stage duration: 60 minutes. 2. Stabilization period before measurement: 45 minutes after position change. 3. Washout: 45-minute supine washout period between position stages. 4. EIT ventilation measurement: after stabilization in each position. 5. EIT perfusion measurement: during breath-hold ≥8 seconds (actual breath-hold time recorded. 6. Tracer bolus: 10 mL of 10% sodium chloride solution OR 10 mL of 5% sodium bicarbonate solution, injected over 2-3 seconds via central or peripheral venous line.
Locations (1)
Ruijin Hospital, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Department of Critical Care Medicine
Shanghai, China