| Literature DB >> 30881565 |
Ruth Gerson1, Nasuh Malas2, Vera Feuer3, Gabrielle H Silver4, Raghuram Prasad5, Megan M Mroczkowski6.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Agitation in children and adolescents in the emergency department (ED) can be dangerous and distressing for patients, family and staff. We present consensus guidelines for management of agitation among pediatric patients in the ED, including non-pharmacologic methods and the use of immediate and as-needed medications.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30881565 PMCID: PMC6404720 DOI: 10.5811/westjem.2019.1.41344
Source DB: PubMed Journal: West J Emerg Med ISSN: 1936-900X
Considerations when selecting a psychotropic for acute agitation management.
| Medication factors |
| Formulas available |
| Onset and duration of action |
| Presence or absence of active metabolites |
| Interactions with other medications the patient has received in the ED or takes at home |
| Metabolism and exrcetion |
| Potential side effects or other drug effects that may be advantageous |
| Patient factors |
| Etiology or etiologies of agitation |
| Routes of administration available (PO, IV, IM, NGT) |
| GI function |
| Nutritional status and physical size |
| Hepatic function |
| Renal function |
| Other co-morbid physical health concerns |
| Desired response or effect on patient |
| Previous experience with psychotropics |
| Response to non-pharmacologic de-escalation strategies |
| Patient preference |
| Family expectation and family preference |
| System factors |
| Training and experience with non-pharmacologic approaches to agitation management and with use of different medications for agitation |
| Comfort of other work providers with use, monitorind and management of a given medication |
| Availability of monitoring practices within the care setting and hospital system |
ED, emergency department; PO, by mouth; IV, intravenous; GI, gastrointestinal; IM; intramuscular; NGT, nasogastric tube.
Medication reference.
| Medication | Dose | Peak effect | Max daily dose | Notes/monitoring |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diphenhydramine (antihistaminic) | PO/IM: 12.5–50mg | PO: 2 hours | Child: 50–100 mg | Avoid in delirium. |
| Lorazepam (benzodiazepine) | PO/IM/IV/NGT: 0.5 mg-2 mg | IV: 10 minutes | Child: 4 mg | Can cause disinhibition or delirium in younger or DD youth. |
| Clonidine (alpha2 agonist) | PO: 0.05 mg-0.1 mg | PO: 30–60 minutes | 27–40.5 kg: 0.2 mg/day | Monitor for hypotension and bradycardia. |
| Chlorpromazine (antipsychotic) | PO/IM: 12.5–60 mg (IM should be half PO dose) | PO: 30–60 minutes | Child <5 years: 40mg/day | Monitor hypotension. |
| Haloperidol (antipsychotic) | PO/IM: 0.5 mg-5 mg (IM should be half a dose of PO) | PO: 2 hours | 15–40 kg: 6mg | Monitor hypotension. |
| Olanzapine (antipsychotic) | PO/ODT or IM: 2.5–10 mg (IM should be half or 1/4 dose of PO) | PO: 5 hours (range 1–8 hours) | 10–20 mg Depending on antipsychotic exposure | Do not give with or within 1 hour of any BZD given risk for respiratory suppresion |
| Risperidone (antipsychotic) | PO/ODT: 0.25–1mg | PO: 1 hour | Child: 1–2 mg | Can cause akathisia (restlessness/agitaion) in higher doses. |
| Quetiapine (antipsychotic) | PO: 25–50 mg | PO: 30 minutes-2 hours | >10 years: 600 mg | More sedating at lower doses |
PO, by mouth; IM, intramuscular; IV, intravenous; NGT, nasogastric tube; mg, milligram; EPS, extrapyramidal symptoms; DD, developmental disability; mg/kg, milligrams per kilogram; BZD, benzodiazepines; EKG, electrocardiogram; AIMS, Abnormal Involuntary Movement Scale; MDD, major depressive disorder; ODT, orally dissolving tablet.