Effect of Deep versus Moderate Neuromuscular Blockade on Quantitatively Assessed Postoperative Atelectasis Using Computed Tomography in Thoracic Surgery; a Randomized Double-Blind Controlled Trial

Author:

Lee Bong-Jae,Lee Han Na,Chung Jun-YoungORCID,Kim DaehyunORCID,Kim Jung Im,Seo HyungseokORCID

Abstract

Background: postoperative atelectasis is a significant clinical problem during thoracic surgery with one-lung ventilation. Intraoperative deep neuromuscular blockade can improve surgical conditions, but an increased risk of residual paralysis may aggravate postoperative atelectasis. Every patient was verified to have full reversal before extubation. We compared the effect of deep versus moderate neuromuscular blockade on postoperative atelectasis quantitatively using chest computed tomography. Methods: patients undergoing thoracic surgery were randomly allocated to two groups: moderate neuromuscular blockade during surgery (group M) and deep neuromuscular blockade during surgery (group D). The primary outcome was the proportion and the volume of postoperative atelectasis measured by chest computed tomography on postoperative day 2. The mean values of the repeatedly measured intraoperative dynamic lung compliance during surgery were also compared. Result: the proportion of postoperative atelectasis did not differ between the groups (1.32 [0.47–3.20]% in group M and 1.41 [0.24–3.07]% in group D, p = 0.690). The actual atelectasis volume was 38.2 (12.8–61.4) mL in group M and 31.9 (7.84–75.0) mL in group D (p = 0.954). Some factors described in the lung protective ventilation were not taken into account and might explain the atelectasis in both groups. The mean lung compliance during one-lung ventilation was higher in group D (26.6% in group D vs. 24.1% in group M, p = 0.026). Conclusions: intraoperative deep neuromuscular blockade did not affect postoperative atelectasis when compared with moderate neuromuscular blockade if full reversal was verified.

Funder

Merck Sharp and Dohme

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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