| Literature DB >> 29051890 |
Alice Fagin1, Tina L Palmieri2.
Abstract
Burn patients experience anxiety and pain in the course of their injury, treatment, and recovery. Hence, treatment of anxiety and pain is paramount after burn injury. Children, in particular, pose challenges in anxiety and pain management due to their unique physiologic, psychologic, and anatomic status. Burn injuries further complicate pain management and sedation as such injuries can have effects on medication response and elimination. Burn injuries further complicate pain management and sedation as such injuries can have effects on medication response and elimination. The purpose of this review is to describe the challenges associated with management of anxiety, pain, and sedation in burned children and to describe the different options for treatment of anxiety and pain in burned children.Entities:
Keywords: Burns; Pediatric; Sedation
Year: 2017 PMID: 29051890 PMCID: PMC5641993 DOI: 10.1186/s41038-017-0094-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Burns Trauma ISSN: 2321-3868
Sedation levels (DDD)
| Minimal sedation | Moderate sedation | Deep sedation | General anesthesia | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Responsiveness | Normal response to verbal stimulation | Purposeful response to verbal or tactile stimulation | Purposeful response following repeated or painful stimulation | Unarousable even with painful stimulus |
| Airway | Unaffected | No intervention required | Intervention may be required | Intervention often required |
| Spontaneous Ventilation | Unaffected | Adequate | May be inadequate | Frequently inadequate |
| Cardiovascular function | Unaffected | Usually maintained | Usually maintained | May be impaired |
Commonly used dosages for common sedative agents
| Medication | Common dosages (continuous) | Common dosages (procedural) |
|---|---|---|
| Midazolam | 0.06–0.12 mg/kg/h | 0.25–0.5 mg/kg by mouth 30 min prior |
| Dexmedetomidine | 0.2–1.5 mcg/kg/h | Loading 1 mcg/kg IV over 10 min followed by maintenance 0.6 mcg/kg/h |
| Propofol | 2.5–3.5 mg/kg IV over 20–30 s followed by 125–300 mcg/kg/min | |
| Ketamine | 2 mcg/kg/min for opioid sparing | 1–4.5 mg/kg IV or IM, additional dosages 0.5–1 mg/kg as needed |
| Haloperidol | 0.5 mg/day by mouth in 2–3 divided doses, may increase every 5–7 days until desired response |
Common adverse effects for common sedative agents
| Medication | Common adverse effects |
|---|---|
| Midazolam | Hypotension, respiratory depression, oversedation, significant risk of tolerance |
| Dexmedetomidine | Bradycardia, hypotension, nausea/vomiting, fever, hypoxia, anemia |
| Propofol | Propofol infusion syndrome (severe metabolic acidosis, hyperkalemia, hyperlipidemia, rhabdomyolysis and organ failure) |
| Ketamine | Airway obstruction, laryngospasm, respiratory depression, tachycardia, hypotension, emergence delirium, hypersalivation |
| Haloperidol | Acute dystonic reactions, parkinsonian reactions, body temperature dysregulation, akathisia |