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Anesthesia Issues

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Anesthesia Issues Propofol for pediatric procedural sedation reducing the pain on propofol injection laryngospasm February 7, 2002 Sarah McPherson – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anesthesia Issues


1
Anesthesia Issues
  • Propofol for pediatric procedural sedation
  • reducing the pain on propofol
    injection
  • laryngospasm
  • February 7, 2002
  • Sarah McPherson

2
Pediatric procedural sedation
  • The goal of procedural sedation is the safe and
    effective control of pain, anxiety, and motion so
    as to allow a necessary procedure to be performed
    and to provide an appropriate degree of memory
    loss or decreased awareness.
  • NEJM.2000342(12)938-945

3
What is the current status?
  • Most peds sedation is with Ketamine or Midazolam
    a narcotic
  • NEJM.2000342(12)938-45
  • adverse effects including oxygen desaturation,
    apnea, stridor, laryngospasm, bronchospasm,
    cardiovascular instability, emesis, aspiration,
    emergence reactions, and paradoxical reactions
    occur in approximately 2.3 of cases
  • Ann Emerg Med.199934(4)483-91

4
Why the concerns about propofol?
  • Concerns of upper airway obstruction
  • 10 children aged 2-10
  • deep sedation with propofol but none were
    intubated
  • MRI to visualize glottic structures during
    sedation
  • preserve upper airway at all measured sites
  • Anesth.199990(6)1617-23

5
More concerns
  • Hypoxia
  • hypotension
  • apnea
  • laryngospasm
  • overshooting depth of anesthesia

6
Propofol infusion syndrome
  • Reported in 18 children
  • children admitted to ICU
  • sedated with high doses of propofol for gt 48 hr
  • progressive myocardial failure and death
  • Paed Anasth.19988(6)491-9

7
Lactic acidemia and bradyarrhythmias
  • Refractory acidemia, bradycardia, hypotension,
    lipemia and oliguria
  • reported in 11 children after propofol infusion
    in the ICU
  • direct link to propofol not proven
  • no case reports with one time use
  • Crit Care Med.199826(12)1959-60

8
Propofol in the OR
  • Safety documented in surgical, opthamologic,
    urologic and dental procedures
  • Gastro Endo.200255(1)
  • routinely used at ACH for induction of anesthesia

9
What about procedural sedation?
  • In the ICU
  • prospective study N 50
  • sedation with intermittent boluses of propofol
  • preprocedure fasting
  • 68 systolic hypotension, 30 requiring iv fluid
  • 4 hypoxia
  • 12 partial upper airway obstruction
  • 2 apnea
  • no children require oral airways
  • start to recovery time 23 min
  • Pediatrics.2000106(4)742-7

10
In the ICU
  • Retrospective, N 52 children, 335 procedures
  • oncology patients
  • propofol, propofol fentanyl, propofol midaz
  • 6 episodes of hypoxia
  • 1 episode of laryngospasm
  • J Ped Hem Onc.200123(5)290-3

11
In the ICU
  • Retrospective, N 64
  • pre procedure fasting
  • analgesia and sedation with either ketamine
    midaz iv, Propofol and fentanyl iv, ketamine
    midaz po
  • length of anesthesia time 17 min (range 10-50
    min)in propofol group, 37 min (range 10 -
    150min)
  • no respiratory depression, hypotension, or emesis
    in fentanyl/propofol group
  • Am J Emerg Med.1999171-3

12
Use for diagnostic imaging
  • 2 English studies
  • N 82, 34 with wt lt 10 kg, 48 gt 10 kg
  • all received supplemental oxygen
  • 10 transient hypotension, 1 hypoxia
  • Acta Anaesth sand.199640(5)561-5
  • N 30 (1-10 yrs)
  • all received supplemental oxygen
  • 7 hypoxia secondary to apnea (resolved with
    gental stimulation)
  • no hypotension
  • Anesth.199379(5)953-8

13
Use in endoscopy
  • N 50
  • prospective randomized, propofol sedation vs
    inhalational GA
  • pre procedure fasting
  • 36 hypotension, no treatment required
  • 24 hypoxia, corrected with nasal prongs
  • 20 reversible apnea
  • Gastro Endo.200255(1)

14
Use in the ED
  • N 91
  • prospective randomized, propofol vs midazolam
  • isolated extremity injuries, all received
    morphine
  • recovery times 14.9 /- 11.1 in propofol
  • 76.4 /-47.5 min in Midazolam group
  • mild transient hypoxia 10 (similar in both
    groups)
  • Acad Emerg Med.19996(10)989-97

15
Propofol for kids
  • Pros
  • rapid recovery
  • titrateable
  • no emergence reaction
  • Cons
  • line between conscious sedation and borderline
    GA
  • incidence of apnea and hypoxia likely higher than
    with ketamine
  • small amounts of supporting data for use in ED

16
Ouch! It hurts!
  • Injection pain reported in 40-90 of all cases
  • up to 50 of patients experience severe pain
  • recollection of pain is 50-80 post procedure
  • recollection of pain severity post procedure
    reflects pain on injection
  • Can J Anesth. 1995. 4212 pp.1108-12
  • Br J Anaest. 1994. 72 pp.342-44

17
What has been looked at?
  • Temperature pH
  • injection site opioids
  • local anaesthetics speed of injection
  • sedatives NSAIDS
  • What really works???

18
What do the studies show?
  • Temperature
  • warming to 37 oC or cooling to 4oC makes no
    difference compared to room temperature
  • Anaesthesia. 1998.53,pp79-88
  • Paed Anasth. 2000.10(2)129-32
  • Anesthesiology. 1998.89(4)1041
  • Anesthesiology. 1999.91(2)591
  • pH
  • when decreased from 7.97 to 6.32 (with addition
    of lidocaine or HCl) found decrease in pain
  • Br J Anaesth.199778502-506

19
What do the studies show?
  • Injection site
  • dorsum of hand 50 experience pain
  • antecubital fossa 0 experienced pain
  • Anaesthesia.198843(6)492-4
  • Speed of injection
  • pain with bolus 50 vs 73 when given over 75 sec
  • Anaesthesia.198843(6)492-4

20
What do the studies show?
  • NSAIDs
  • 10 mg ketorolac venous occlusion X 2 min
    decreased pain
  • ketorolac causes injection pain
  • Anaesth.200055284-287
  • topical lidocaine ionophoresis
  • 50 placebo group described severe pain vs 75
    with no pain and 25 with mild pain in lido group
  • Br J Anaest.1999.82(3)432-4

21
What do the studies show?
  • Metoclopramide
  • reduction from 50 to 24 with pretreatment with
    5-10 mg iv, similar to effect with lido
  • Br J Anaest.199269316-317
  • Acta Anasthes Scan.199943(1)24-7
  • Thiopental
  • conflicting evidence
  • gt100mg decrease incidence of pain from 50 to 12
  • Anaesthesia.199449817-818
  • 50mg no difference from controls
  • Can J Anesth.199542(12)1108-12

22
What do the studies show?
  • Fentanyl
  • studied with 150ug injected with venous occlusion
    for 1 min. prior to propofol injection
  • conflicting evidence
  • Acta Anaesthes Sinica.199735(4)217-21
  • Mid East J Anesthes.199613(6)613-9
  • Alfentanil
  • 1 mg injected prior to propofol decreases pain
    from 67-84 to 24-36 (similar to lido)
  • 15ug/kg in kids similar to 0.5 mg/kg of lido
  • Acta Anaesthes Scand.199236564-68 Br J
    Anaesthes. 199472342-44
  • Anesth Analg.199682469-71

23
What the studies show
  • Lidocaine
  • all studies show a reduction in pain scores with
    lido
  • premixed within 30 min with propofol is better
    than pre-injection with lido
  • Anaesthes.198543(6)91-2
  • Anaethes.198843(6)492-4
  • Dose?
  • 3 studies have looked at doses gt 20mg/induction
  • doses of 0.4-0.6mg/kg for adults or 0.2 mg/kg
    for kids appear to be more effective
  • case series using 1mg/kg reduced pain to 0
    (N50)
  • Anaesthes.199247604-6 Anesthes.199583(3A)A38
    5 Anaesthes.19904570

24
lidocaine
  • Most effective analgesia with a bier block
  • 0.5 mg/kg lidocaine
  • rubber tourniquet to forearm for 30-120 sec
  • absolute risk reduction of pain 60
  • NNT 1.6
  • Anesth Analg.200090(4)936-9

25
The bottom line
  • 0.5 mg/kg lidocaine injected with a tourniquet is
    the best method to prevent pain
  • Premixed lidocaine with propofol works. I would
    use 0.5mg/kg
  • alfentanil 1mg prior to injection may further
    reduce pain
  • larger veins for infusion cause less pain

26
Laryngospasm
27
Laryngospasm
  • a prolonged occlusion of the glottis caused by
    contraction of the intrinsic laryngeal muscles
  • Am J Otol.199516(1)49-52
  • in general it is considered present when
    inflation of the lungs is impossible secondary to
    laryngeal muscle contraction and other causes are
    excluded (ie occluding tongue, bronchospasm)
  • Acta Anaesthes Scan.198428567-575

28
What is the incidence
  • Unable to find any references citing frequency in
    the ED patient population
  • literature post GA
  • 0.87 in adults
  • 1.23 age 0-9 yr
  • 2.28 age 1-3 month
  • Acta Anaesthes Scand.198428567-575
  • 3-6 prospective data in kids
  • J Clin Anesthes.19924(3)200-3

29
Potential Complications of laryngospasm
  • Bronchospasm 4.3
  • Hypoxia 3.5
  • Vomiting 8.1
  • Aspiration 1.2
  • Arrhythmia 1
  • Cardiac arrest 0.5
  • Acta Anaesthes Scan.198428567-575
  • in children, 9 of 293 cardiac arrest (3)
    secondary to laryngospasm
  • Anesthesiology.200093(1)6-14

30
Risk Factors
  • Stimulation gt depth of anesthesia
  • maintaining ETT with light anesthesia
  • Stimulation
  • blood, mucous, vomitus
  • laryngeal or trigeminal nerve stimulation

31
Risk Factors
  • URTI
  • 2 fold higher risk of laryngospasm in kids with
    active or recent URI undergoing GA
  • Anesthesiology.199685(3).475-480
  • Second hand tobacco smoke
  • 9.5 vs 0.9 risk of laryngospasm with GA
  • Anesthes Analg.199682724-7

32
Risk Factors
  • Type of airway adjunct
  • facemask-oral airway lt LMA ETT
  • Can J Anesth.200047(4)315-18
  • Anesth Analg.199886706-11
  • Anesthisiology.199888(4)970-77
  • case reports with use of jet ventilation intraop
  • Drugs
  • case reports of midazolam or fentanyl causing
    laryngospasm
  • Ann Emerg Med.199832(2)263-5
  • Anaesth.199550(9)375
  • Crit Care Med.200028(3)836-9

33
Treatment of Laryngospasm
  • Stop the stimulus if possible
  • Jaw thrust
  • counteracts the descent of the hyoid and can
    reverse the ball valve effect

34
Treatment
  • CPAP
  • apply 20-30 cm H2O
  • apply constant pressure
  • avoid gastric insufflation
  • apply styloid pressure

35
Treatment
  • Succinylcholine
  • timing depends on the clinical situation
  • can I break laryngospasm relatively quickly with
    CPAP?
  • What is the clinical status of the patient?
  • Do I have time to wait for succinylcholine to
    work?
  • Doses as low as 0.1mg/kg iv have been shown to
    effectively treat laryngospasm (N 3)
  • Anaesth.199348(3)229-30

36
Treatment what if I dont have iv access?
  • IM sux
  • sites deltoid, quad femoris, intralingular
  • dose 3mg/kg

37
Treatment
  • Time to apnea after Sux
  • IM deltoid / quads 210 sec
  • IM, tongue 75 sec
  • IV 35 sec
  • Anesth Analg.196847605-15

38
Treatment
  • Time to max twitch depression
  • IM quads 295 sec
  • IM tongue 265 sec
  • IM tongue digital massage 133 sec
  • Anesth Prog.199037(6) 296-300

39
Treatment
  • Benefits of the submental approach
  • very vascular region
  • fastest onset of action if iv not available
  • can inject while masking

40
Treatment - other options
  • Nitroglycerin
  • N 2
  • dose 4 microg/kg iv
  • relief within 1 minute
  • Acta Anaeths Scan.199943(10)1081-3
  • intranasal lido epi
  • N 2
  • 5 cc 1 lido with epi intranasal
  • relief within 10 seconds
  • Ann Emerg Med.198514(3)275-6

41
Prevention
  • Literature available only looks at post op
    prevention
  • fentanyl prior to laryngeal stimulation does not
    prevent laryngospasm but does blunt airway
    reflexes
  • Anesthesiology.199888(6)1459-66
  • topical lidocaine (4mg/kg) prior to extubation
    decrease laryngospasm post TA
  • Arch Otol.19911171123-8
  • reduce modifiable risk factors

42
Laryngospasm take home points
  • Simple maneuvers often work
  • practice good mask technique
  • know when to give sux
  • if you dont have an iv submental sux with
    digital massage is a good option
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