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Preventive Effect of Leg Wrapping Combined With Trendelenburg Position on Hypotension Induced by Propofol

Sponsored by Hyungmook Lee

About this trial

Last updated 8 years ago

Study ID

B1304200001

Status

Unknown status

Type

Interventional

Phase

N/A

Placebo

No

Accepting

18-75 Years
18 to 80 Years
All
All

Not accepting

Not accepting
Healthy Volunteers

Trial Timing

Ended 7 years ago

What is this trial about?

Although propofol is widely used as an induction agent for a general anesthesia, it can induce a profound hypotension, which leads to the hypo-perfusion of end organs and eventually increases morbidities. Theoretically, applying Trendelenburg position (head down and leg up position) increases cardiac preloads and cardiac outputs. However, in past researches, changing to Trendelenburg position alone is not enough and does not prevent propofol induced hypotension. Previous studies proved that leg wrapping effectively prevent hypotension after neuraxial anesthesia during Cesarean section. The leg wrapping prevents hypotension by increasing vascular resistance of lower extremities. The investigators made a hypothesis that applying both Trendelenburg position and leg wrapping prevent propofol induced hypotension more effectively than either applying Trendelenburg position only or taking no preventive measures.

What are the participation requirements?

Yes

Inclusion Criteria

- American Society of Anesthesiologist's physiologic status class 1, 2, and 3.

- under general anesthesia

No

Exclusion Criteria

- severe cardiac/pulmonary/liver/renal disease

- BMI > 30 kg/m2

- known or risk factor of increased intraocular pressure or intracranial pressure

- uncontrolled hypertension

- high risk for propofol allergy

- allergies to medications related to anesthesia

- mechanical difficulties with leg wrapping ( wound on legs, devices on legs )

- emergent operation

- high risk of gastric aspiration ( gastrointestinal obstruction, short nil per os(NPO) time )

- patient wearing elastic stocking for therapeutic purpose

Locations

Location

Status

Recruiting