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Decreasing Preoperative Stress to Prevent Postoperative Delirium and Postoperative Cognitive Decline in Cardiac Surgical Patients.

Decreasing Preoperative Stress to Prevent Postoperative Delirium and Postoperative Cognitive Decline in Cardiac Surgical Patients.

Recruiting
18 years and older
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Patients undergoing cardiac surgery often complain of anxiety before a major operation and the resulting stress. This circumstance is a risk factor for mental problems that may occur after the operation (e.g., delirium or memory deficits). This study aims to prevent these discomforts by a preoperative relaxation intervention.

Description

Preoperative anxiety and stress are risk factors for postoperative delirium (PD), postoperative cognitive decline (POCD), morbidity, and mortality. The primary objective of this study is to reduce the preoperative stress response through the combined presentation of a virtual reality environment with natural landscape and binaural beats. The proposed study is a monocenter, 5-arm prospective randomized controlled intervention of 125 patients undergoing elective cardiac surgery using extracorporeal circulation. A 360 ° video sequence including natural sounds (with and without binaural beats) are presented to 2 groups, and 2 groups receive only natural sounds (with and without binaural beats); a group without stimuli (standard procedure) represents the control group.

On the day of admission to the acute care clinic, a detailed examination of neuropsychological functions and health-related quality of life (HQL) is scheduled. Cortisol-saliva, heart rate variability and electrodermal activity as indicators for stress and relaxation are measured during the intervention phase (duration: approximately 30 minutes), which leads directly into the narcosis phase.

To investigate postoperative neurocognitive dysfunctions, daily delirium screenings will be performed after surgery, and a neuropsychological examination will be performed at the time of discharge from the acute hospital and at 3 months after surgery. Changes in HQL will also be completed at 3 months post-surgery.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Elective cardiac surgery (coronary artery bypass surgery, aortic or mitral valve replacement/reconstruction, or combination surgery) with standardized extracorporeal circulation.
  2. A sufficiently good knowledge of German is necessary as neuropsychological tests are language-dependent.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. History of acute clinically relevant cognitive impairment of any cause (e.g., dementia, depression, stroke, multiple sclerosis) that may impair neuropsychological evaluation.
  2. Contraindications to the presentation of binaural beats or visual stimuli (e.g., epilepsy),
  3. Significant hearing loss or astigmatism, which may interfere with optimal perception of auditory and visual stimuli.
  4. Taking sedatives on the day of surgery.
  5. Unwilling to participate in the relaxation procedure or neuropsychological testing due to deteriorating health, lack of motivation, or other reasons.
  6. Participation in interventions that aim to change cognitive or emotional functioning which cannot be systematically controlled by our study team.
  7. Participation in an interventional study according to AMG/MPG will also be excluded.
  8. Patients with missing informed consent.

Study details
    Preoperative Stress
    Postoperative Cognitive Dysfunction
    Postoperative Delirium

NCT05036538

Heart and Brain Research Group, Germany

26 January 2024

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