Anaesthesia
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Editorial Comment
The view from the top. Is it worth recording for posterity?
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
A randomised controlled trial comparing high-flow nasal oxygen with standard management for conscious sedation during bronchoscopy.
Traditional conscious sedation for endobronchial ultrasound procedures places patients at risk of desaturation, and high-flow nasal oxygen may reduce the risk. We designed a parallel-group randomised controlled trial of high-flow nasal oxygen at a flow rate of 30-70 l.min-1 via nasal cannulae, compared with standard oxygen therapy at 10 l.min-1 via a bite block in adults planned for conscious sedation for endobronchial ultrasound. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients experiencing desaturation (defined as SpO2 < 90%). ⋯ Oxygen saturation after pre-oxygenation and the lowest oxygen saturation during procedure were significantly higher in the high-flow nasal oxygen group compared with the standard oxygenation group; median (IQR [range] 100 (99-100 [93-100]) vs. 98 (97-99 [94-100]), p = 0.0001 and 97.5 (94-99 [77-100]) vs. 92 (88-95 [79-98]), p < 0.001, respectively. There were no differences in other secondary outcomes. Although high-flow nasal oxygen may prevent desaturation due to some causes, it does not protect against hypoxaemia in all circumstances.