| Literature DB >> 19561987 |
James R Meredith, Kelly P O'Keefe, Sagar Galwankar.
Abstract
Procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA) is an evolving field in pediatric emergency medicine. As new drugs breach the boundaries of anesthesia in the Pediatric Emergency Department, parents, patients, and physicians are finding new and more satisfactory methods of sedation. Short acting, rapid onset agents with little or no lingering effects and improved safety profiles are replacing archaic regimens. This article discusses the warning signs and areas of a patient's medical history that are particularly pertinent to procedural sedation and the drugs used. The necessary equipment is detailed to provide the groundwork for implementing safe sedation in children. It is important for practitioners to familiarize themselves with a select few of the PSA drugs, rather than the entire list of sedatives. Those agents most relevant to PSA in the pediatric emergency department are presented.Entities:
Keywords: Analgesia; pediatric; sedation
Year: 2008 PMID: 19561987 PMCID: PMC2700614 DOI: 10.4103/0974-2700.43189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Emerg Trauma Shock ISSN: 0974-2700
Definitions of levels of sedation
| Minimal sedation |
| Patient responds to verbal commands |
| Cognitive function may be impaired |
| Respiratory and cardiovascular systems unaffected |
| Moderate sedation and analgesia (f.k.a. “Conscious sedation”) |
| Patient responds to verbal commands, may not respond to light tactile stimulus |
| Cognitive function is impaired |
| Ventilation usually adequate, cardiovascular unaffected |
| Deep sedation and analgesia |
| Patient cannot be easily aroused without repeated or painful stimuli |
| Ability to maintain airway may be impaired |
| Spontaneous ventilation may be inadequate, cardiovascular function maintained |
| General anesthesia |
| Loss of consciousness, patient cannot be aroused even with painful stimuli |
| Adequate airway usually cannot maintained and ventilation is impaired |
| Cardiovascular function may be impaired |
Examples of common indication for PSA
| Endoscopy |
| Wound dressing changes |
| Burn care |
| Orthopedic manipulation |
| Laceration repair |
| Suture removal |
| Lumbar puncture |
| Chest tube |
| Fecal impaction removal |
| Eye injuries |
| Central line placement |
| Forensic exams in cases of childhood sexual assault cases |
| Abscess incision and drainage |
PSA: Procedural Sedation and Analgesia
American society of anesthesiologists physical status classification
| Class | Description |
|---|---|
| I | A normal healthy patient |
| II | A patient with mild systemic disease |
| III | A patient with severe systemic disease |
| IV | A patient with severe systemic disease that is a constant life threat |
| V | A moribund patient, not expected to survive without the procedure |
Key components of history to ask a patient prior to PSA
| Past medical history: |
| Major illnesses—Asthma ( |
| Allergies: |
| Opitaes, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, local anesthetics, or others. |
| Current medications: |
| Cardiovascular medications, CNS depressants, |
| Drug use: |
| Narcotics (including heroin), benzodiazepines, barbiturates, cocaine, and alchol. |
| Last oral intake: |
| For non-emergent cases, some guidelines recomment >6 hours for solid food and > 2 hours for clear liquid.[ |
| Volume status: |
| Vomiting, diarrhea, fluid restriction, urine output, making tears. |
PSA: Procedural Sedation and Analgesia
Equipment for procedural sedation and analgesia
| High flow oxygen source and delivery device |
| Suction and large bor catheters |
| Vascular access materials |
| Airway management supplies: endotracheal tubes, bag valve masks, and laryngoscopes |
| Pulse oximetry, blood pressure device, electrocardiography |
| Resuscitation drugs, including intravenous fluids |
| Reversal agents, including flumazenil and naloxone |
May be Optional Devices
Drugs used in procedural sedation and analgesia
| Analgesics Class | Analgesics Name | Dose/Route | Peak | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | Morphine | 0.1-0.2 mg/kg IV | 15 min | 2-4 hours |
| Fentanyl | 1-2 mcg/kg IV | 10 min | 30-60 min | |
| Sedatives | ||||
| | Midazolam | 0.02-0.1 mg/kg IV | 5 min | 1-2 hours |
| 0.2-0.5 mg/kg IN | 20-30 min | 60-90 min | ||
| 0.5-0.75 mg/kg PO | 20-30 min | 60-90 min | ||
| | Pentobarbital | 2-5 mg/kg PR(max 150 mg) | 15-60 min | 1-3 hours |
| 1-3 mg/kg IV (max 150 mg) | 1 min | 15 min | ||
| | Propofol | 1 mg/kg IV, then 0.5 mg/kg IV over 30-60 min | 6-7 min | 5-10 min |
| Etomidate | 0.1-0.2 mg/kg IV | 30 sec | 5-10 min | |
| Dissociative | ||||
| Ketamin | 1-2 mg/kg IV | 5 min | 30-60 min | |
| 3-5 mg/kg IM | 10 min | 1-2 hours | ||
| | Atropine | 1 mg/kg IM/IV, min 0.1 mg (max 0.5 mg) | - | - |
| Midazolamk | 0.05mg/kg IV | - | - | |
| | Nitrous Oxide | 30-50% N2O, mixed with O2 | 3-5 min | 5-10 min |
| Reversal agents | ||||
| | Naloxone | 1-2 hours | - | |
| >5yo or >20 lbs: 2 mg IV/IM/SC/ET q2-3 min | 1-2 hours | - | ||
| | Flumazenil | 0.02 mg/kg IV q 1min (max 1 mg) | - | - |
Commonly used combinations of drugs and their indications
| Midazolam and Morphine (IV) |
| |
| |
| Ketamine and Midazolame (IV) |
| |
| |
| Ketamine (IM) |
| |
| |
| Pentobarbital (PR) |
| CT scans, MRI, etc. |