NOT YET RECRUITING
NCT07686432
Effect of Circadian Rhythm on the Sedative Efficacy and Recovery Quality of Ciprofol General Anesthesia: A Multi-Center Observational Study
The goal of this multi-center observational study is to learn about the effect of circadian rhythm (morning vs. afternoon surgery) on the sedative efficacy, hemodynamic stability (especially induction-associated hypotension), and recovery quality of ciprofol general anesthesia in adult patients undergoing elective non-cardiac and non-cranial surgery, comparing target-controlled infusion (TCI) and non-TCI administration modes.
The main question it aims to answer is:
Does circadian rhythm (time of surgery: morning vs. afternoon) affect the sedative efficacy, incidence of induction-associated hypotension, and recovery quality of ciprofol general anesthesia? Eligible patients aged 18-65 years with ASA physical status I-II and BMI 18-30 kg/m² undergoing elective general anesthesia for non-cardiac and non-cranial surgery (duration 1-2 hours) will be grouped by anesthesia start time (morning: 08:00-11:00; afternoon: 14:00-17:00) and receive ciprofol induction and maintenance via TCI or non-TCI infusion. Perioperative data including hemodynamic changes, ciprofol dosage, recovery time, and adverse events will be recorded and analyzed.
Gender: All
Ages: 18 Years - 65 Years
Circadian Rhythm
Ciprofol
Hemodynamic Instability
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