Title: Pediatric Procedural Sedation
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2Pediatric Procedural Sedation
- Dr. Marc N. Francis
- MD, FRCPC
- University of Calgary
- Foothills Medical Centre
- Alberta Childrens Hospital
3Disclosure
- I do not have an affiliation (financial or
otherwise) with any commercial organization that
may have a direct or indirect connection to the
content of my presentation.
4PSA in the ED
- Painful procedures are unavoidable in emergency
medicine - While anesthesiologists have unique
qualifications to provide sedation, their
availability is variable and unreliable, and is
limited by commitments to the operating room
- Procedural Sedation and Analgesia in the
Emergency Department. - Canadian Consensus Guidelines
- Journal of Emergency Medicine 1999 17(1)
145-156
5Learning Objectives
- Tools of the Trade
- Sedation medications that you should know well
and be familiar with - The Right Tool for the Job
- Discuss the variable needs for procedural
sedation in the ED and pharmaceutical options - Tricks of the Trade
- Some adjuncts and techniques that will make your
job easier - Controversies
- A look at some of the more controversial aspects
of procedural sedation in children - The Future
- What is coming down the pipe for the future of
procedural sedation
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7Importance
- Studies have shown that children are less likely
than adults to receive pain medications and
sedation for similar painful procedures - Children cannot fully understand the medical
necessity for testing or therapeutics - Childrens anxiety can heighten the discomfort
- Allows for control of behaviour for the safe and
successful completion of a procedure - Parental, patient and physician satisfaction
- Selbst SM Analgesic use in the Emergency
Department. Ann Emerg Med 1990191010-1013
8Sedation Spectrum
- Minimal Sedation
- Patient responds appropriately to verbal commands
- Cognitive processing affected but no
cardiopulmonary effects - Moderate Sedation
- Patient responds to verbal commands or with
addition of mild stimulus - Maintains airway and ventilation without required
intervention - Deep Sedation
- Not easily aroused but responds purposefully with
uncomfortable stimulus - May require medical intervention to maintain an
airway and ventilation - General Anesthesia
- Unable to be aroused with a verbal or painful
stimulus - Need help maintaining their airway
Dissociative Sedation
9Indications for Pediatric Procedural Sedation
- Diagnostic
- Urinary Catheterization
- Lumbar puncture
- Radiographic evaluation (CT or MRI)
- Joint aspiration
- Sexual assault examinations
- Eye examinations
- Therapeutic
- IV starts
- Laceration repair
- Abscess ID
- Fracture Reductions
- Dislocations reduction
- Foreign body removal
- Burn dressings
10The Search Continues
- The ideal sedation protocol
- Rapid induction and emergence
- Provides anxiolysis, analgesia and amnesia
- Sufficient control of movement to allow for ease
of procedural completion - Maintain effective spontaneous ventilation and
airway control - Complete Cardiopulmonary stability throughout
- Minimal to no side effects
11Tools of the Trade
12Nitrous Oxide
- Dissociative gas with mild to moderate procedural
anxiolysis, analgesia and amnesia - Dosage
- 50 concentration blended with oxygen
- Ideally self administered
- Advantages
- Onset and offset within 5mins
- Does not require an IV
- Disadvantages
- Requires special delivery device
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Well ventilated room with scavenger system
13Midazolam
- Short-acting agent with rapid onset of
anxiolysis, sedative and amnestic properties - Interacts with GABA receptors in the brain
- Dosage
- 0.2-0.6mg/kg intranasally
- 0.05-0.2mg/kg IV
- 0.1-0.2mg/kg IM
- 0.5-0.75mg/kg PO
- Advantages
- Rapid onset
- Anxiolysis
- Profound retrograde amnesia
- No IV required
- Disadvantages
- Does not provide analgesia
- Disturbance in respiratory function /- hypoxemia
- Paradoxical reactions
14Fentanyl
- Synthetic opiod which is narcotic of choice in
PSA - Rapid onset and short duration make it easy to
titrate - Does not cause histamine release so minimal CV
effects - Dosage
- 1-3mcg/kg IM or IV
- 10-20mcg/kg oral or transmucosal
- Advantages
- Excellent analgesic
- Peak effect within 15-30mins
- Reversible with naloxone
- Disadvantages
- Nausea and vomiting
- Respiratory depression
- Hypotension
- No amnesia. Minimal sedation
- Fentanyl Rigid Chest
15Ketamine
- Dissociative agent
- Sedation, analgesia and amnesia are maintained
- Inhibits reuptake of catecholamines
- Stimulates salivary, tracheal and bronchial
secretions - Dosage
- 1-2mg/kg IV
- 2-5mg/kg IM
- 6-10mg/kg PO
- Advantages
- Reliably produces potent analgesia, sedation and
amnesia - Hemodynamic stability
- Maintain airway reflexes
- Disadvantages
- Emergence phenomenon
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Increased secretions
- Potentially serious respiratory complications
16Propofol
- Potent hypnotic agent with no analgesic
properties - Effects lipid membrane Na-channel function and
Stimulates GABA - Rapid onset, redistribution and elimination
- Dosage
- 1mg/kg IV bolus then 0.5mg/kg q45-60sec
- Advantages
- Rapid onset/offset
- Easily titratable
- Anti-emetic
- Bronchodilator
- Disadvantages
- No analgesic properties
- Potent cardiopulmonary depressant
- Pain on injection
- Inadvertent oversedation
17The Right Tool for the Job
18The Right tool for the Job
- 28mth ? presents with 4day hx of fever, vomiting
and flank pain - PMHX Healthy
- Temp 38.5, HR 121, RR 16, BP 84/56, Sat
98 RA - Not toilet trained
- Wanting to do an in/out cath
- Nitrous Oxide
- Midazolam
- Fentanyl
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Sedation Spectrum
- Minimal Sedation
19The Right tool for the Job
- 5yo ? fell onto wooden post
- Extensive and complex facial laceration requiring
multilayer closure - PMHX Asthma well controlled
- VSSA
- Nitrous Oxide
- Midazolam
- Fentanyl
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Sedation Spectrum
- Dissociative Sedation
20The Right tool for the Job
- 15yo ? playing soccer and collided with another
player - Immediate pain to R shoulder which is clinically
consistent with anterior dislocation - Very Anxious!!!
- PMHX Healthy
- Normal Vital signs
- Nitrous Oxide
- Midazolam
- Fentanyl
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Sedation Spectrum
- Moderate Sedation
21The Right tool for the Job
- 7yo ? presents with patellar dislocation while
playing softball - Knee in spasm and patient extremely anxious
with any attempts to examine or maneuver same - PMHx Healthy
- VSSA
- Nitrous Oxide
- Midazolam
- Fentanyl
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Sedation Spectrum
- Minimal Sedation
22The Right tool for the Job
- 3yo ? fell off the bed and refusing to walk
- Xray shows a displaced spiral tibial fracture
- PMHx seizure disorder well controlled
- VSSA
- Nitrous Oxide
- Midazolam
- Fentanyl
- Ketamine
- Propofol
- Sedation Spectrum
- Dissociative Sedation
23Tricks of the Trade
24Ondansetron with Ketamine Sedation
- Vomiting in the ED and upon discharge after
Ketamine sedation is common - Reported frequency of vomiting ranges from 4-19
- Increased vomiting associated with increasing
patient age - Vomiting
- Decreases patient and parental satisfaction
- Delays discharge and consumes ED resources
25- Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled
trial - N 255 children randomized to
- N 128 IV Ondansetron 0.15mg/kg to max 4mg
- N 127 Placebo
- Results
- ED vomiting was less common with ondansetron 4.7
vs 12.6 p0.02 - NNT of 13
- Vomiting in the ED or after discharge was less
frequent with ondansetron 7.8 vs 18.9 p0.01 - NNT of 9
26Pre-oxygenation with procedural sedation
- Published adverse event rates during pediatric
ED procedural sedation vary between 2 and 18 - Consistently the most common adverse event is
transient hypoxia - Childrens basal oxygen use/kg is twice that of
adults - Smaller FRC
- Shorter safe apnea period before desaturation
- Transient hypoxia is predictably seen with
propofol - Very common with Midazolam and Fentanyl
- Less likely with Ketamine unless
co-administration with other resp depressants
27Adjunctive Atropine with Ketamine Sedation
- Ketamine stimulates oral secretions
- In rare circumstances this has been implicated in
airway compromise1 - Historically prophylactic anticholinergic agents
have been given with ketamine to blunt
hypersalivation - Glycopyrrolate 0.2mg
- Atropine 0.02mg/kg
28- Prospective observational study of ED pediatric
patients receiving ketamine sedation - N 1090 patients over a 3yr period
- 947 (87) were performed without adjunctive
atropine - Assessed for salivation on a 100mm visual analog
scale and documented complications - Results
- 92 of patients had salivation rated at 0mm or
none - Only 1.3 were rated gt50mm
- Transient airway complications in 3.2 of which
only one was thought to be related to
hypersalivation (incidence 0.11 95 CI 0.003 -
0.59) - No occurrence of assisted ventilation or
intubation
29Adjunctive Atropine with Ketamine Sedation
- Omission of atropine is safe
- Routine prophylaxis is unnecessary
- There is minimal added risk presented with its
administration - Possible subsets of patients which may benefit
- Very young children
- Those undergoing oropharyngeal procedures
30Controversies
31In your local ED.
- 9yo M previously healthy with no meds/allergies
- Fell mountain biking 40mins ago and has deformed
and partially angulated radius/ulnar - Neurovascularly intact distally
- Wearing helmet and no issues with potential HI
- Bag of chips 2hrs ago with bottle of Gatorade
- Survey
- Would you sedate this child now?
- What would you use?
32Pre-sedation Fasting guidelines
- Minimal scientific evidence to support fasting
- Risk of aspiration during ED PSA has not been
studied - Only single case of pulmonary aspiration with ED
sedation has been reported - Cheung K, et al. 2007. Ann Emerg Med
200749462-464 - Extrapolation from general anesthesia literature
- Incidence of aspiration is low (13,420)
- Mortality is rare (1125,109)
33Relative risk of aspiration
- Good reason to believe that aspiration risk with
PSA may be lower than GA - 2/3 of aspiration occurs during airway
manipulation - Deeper level of sedation with GA
- Generally younger and healthier patients (ASA
I-II) - Inhalational agents are more emetogenic
- Ketamine sedation preserves protective airway
reflexes
34What we are told
- CAEP
- No specific guidelines
- Insufficient data to show that fasting improves
outcomes in patients undergoing ED procedural
sedation - In elective situations consider NPO x 2hrs
(liquids) and 6hrs (solids)
- ACEP
- No specific guidelines
- No study has determined a necessary fasting
period before initiation of PSA - Recent food intake is not a contraindication for
PSA but should be considered in choosing the
timing and target of sedation
35- ED specific clinical practice advisory
- Goal to create a tool to permit ED physician to
identify prudent limits of sedation depth and
timing in light of fasting status - Developed a 4-step assessment prior to sedation
- 1) Asses patient risk
- 2) Assess the timing and nature of recent oral
intake - 3) Assess the urgency of the procedure
- 4) Determine the prudent limit of targeted depth
and length of procedural sedation and analgesia
36Assess Patient risk
- Difficult airway?
- High risk for esophageal reflux?
- Esophageal disease
- Hiatal hernia
- PUD
- Bowel obstruction
- Extremes of age?
- gt70
- lt6mths
- Severe Systemic disease?
- ASA III
37Timing and nature of oral intake
- Single time point for sake of simplicity 3hrs
- From lowest to highest theoretical risk
- 1) Nothing
- 2) Clear liquids
- 3) Light snack
- 4) Heavier snack or meal
38Urgency of the procedure
- Emergency
- Cardioversion for life threatening arrythmia
- Reduction of markedly angulated fracture
- Urgent
- Care of dirty wounds and lacerations
- Abscess ID
- Semiurgent
- Care of clean wounds and lacerations
- Shoulder reduction
- Nonurgent or elective
- Foreign body in external ear canal
- Ingrown toenail
39Depth of sedation
- Procedure Duration
- Brief lt10mins
- Intermediate 10-20mins
- Extended gt20mins
40Standard-risk patient
41Higher-risk Patient
42Capnography monitoring during procedural sedation
- Non-invasive measurement of the partial pressure
of CO2 from the airway during inspiration and
expiration
43Capnography monitoring
- Traditional monitoring
- Pulse oximetry oxygenation
- RR and clinical observation ventilation
- Capnography
- More precise and direct assessment of the
patients ventilatory status - Assessment of airway patency and respiratory
pattern - Early warning system for prehypoxic respiratory
depression - Assessment of depth of sedation
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45Show me the evidence!!!
- Comparison of oximetry, capnography and clinical
observation in the ED2 - 75 of pediatric patients with respiratory
compromise were noted by EtCO2 monitoring only - Pediatric RCT comparing capnography to clinical
observation in detecting resp events3 - Clinical assessment identified hypoventilation in
3 and did not identify any patients with apnea - Capnography data showed ventilation was
compromised in gt50 of cases and nearly 25
fulfilled criteria for apnea
46Recommendations
- Good evidence that capnography provides a means
for early detection of sedation-related
hypoventilation - Clinical significance with regards to improved
patient outcomes has not been shown
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48Future
- where were going we dont
- need roads Dr. Emmett Brown
49Ketofol
- Propofol
- Pros
- Antinauseant effects
- Amnestic
- Smooth recovery profile
- Cons
- Cardiovascular and respiratory depression
- Bradycardia
- Non-analgesic
- Ketamine
- Pros
- Analgesia
- Amnesia
- Respiratory and cardiovascular stability
- Cons
- Emergence phenomena
- Vomiting
50- Prospective case series
- 114 ED procedural sedations
- 11 mixture of ketamine 10mg/ml and propofol
10mg/ml - All age groups including children as young as 4
- Results
- 97 success rate with procedures
- 3 patients with transient hypoxia
- 1 required BVM
- 3 patients with emergence
- No hypotension or vomiting
- Patient satisfaction scores were 10 on a 1-10
scale
51- Systematic review of the literature
- 8 clinical trials were included
- Adult and pediatric studies were included
- Results
- Ketofol was not superior to propofol monotherapy
- Conflicting data exist regarding hemodynamic and
respiratory complications - At higher doses addition of ketamine to propofol
may incur more adverse effects - Compatability data for the two agents combined in
a syringe are limited
52Ketofol
- Theoretical benefits that have not been
demonstrated in the literature - Optimum ratio of ketamine and propofol remains to
be determined - Dosing regiments currently are highly variable
- Not ready for Primetime.Yet
53BIS
54Bispectral Index
- BIS
- Uses processed EEG signals to measure the depth
of sedation - Validated with children undergoing general
anesthesia in the OR
55- Determine if the BIS monitor could be used to
guide physicians in titrating propofol for safe
levels of deep sedation in children - Results
- BIS score of 45 determined to provide deep
sedation for 95 of the population - Useful objective tool to guide effective
titration of propofol for children
56Conclusions
- Familiarize yourself with your pharmaceutical
options and pick the right tool for the job - Pre-oxygenation is your friend
- Atropine is out and ondansetron is in for routine
ketamine sedations - Pre-procedural fasting guidelines are not
black-and-white and each situation is unique - Consider the additional information provided by
capnography if it is available to you - Ketofol not ready for primetime.. yet
57Questions?
58Additional References
- Green SM et al. Intramuscular ketamine for
pediatric sedation in the emergency department
safety profile with 1022 cases. Ann Emerg Med.
199831688-97 - Hart LS et al. The value of end-tidal CO2
monitoring when comparing three methods of
conscious sedation in children undergoing painful
procedures in the emergency department. Pediatr
Emerg Care 199713(3)189-93 - Lightdale JR et al. Microstream capnography
improves patient monitoring during moderate
sedation a randomized, controlled trial.
Pediatrics 2006117(6)e1170-8 - Lopez MD et al. Pediatric Procedural Sedation.
Emergency Medicine Reports 200813(12)145-156
59Additional Slides
60Fentanyl Rigid Chest
- Believed to be due to a central agonist effect of
narcotics - The pediatric population is more vulnerable to
the syndrome - Reported with doses from 2.5-6.5mcg/kg
- Difficulty in ventilating is largely due to upper
airway (glottis) closure - Not thoracoabdominal tone as originally thought
- In kids thoracoabdominal tone plays a larger
role
61Prevention of Fentanyl Rigid Chest
62Propofol epilepsy
63Is Propofol a pro- or anticonvulsant?
- 81 reported cases of presumed propofol induced
seizure like activity - Agonist-antagonist effect on Glycine which is a
major inhibitory neurotransmitter
64- Prospective study
- Effects of IV propofol on EEG
- 25 children with epilepsy
- 25 children with learning disorders
- Undergoing elective sedation for MRI
65- Results
- No child in either group had increased spike-wave
pattern with propofol - Depression in spike-wave pattern in the children
with epilepsy was seen - Supported the concept of propofol being a
sedative-hypnotic agent with anticonvulsant
properties
66Aspiration case in literature
67- 65yoF with HTN
- Trimalleolar fracture
- Morphine/fentanyl/Propofol for first PSA with no
significant complications - Second PSA in attempt to improve the reduction
- 6hrs after last meal
- Propofol/fentanyl
- 10 mins after propofol bolus the patient vomited
into the mask and aspirated
68- Sats were 86 initially
- Airway was suctioned and BVM was started with
improvement to sats 97 - Patient remained hypoxic with sats 84 on RA
- Inspiratory and expiratory wheezes throughout
- RSI was performed and admitted to ICU where she
was ventilated for 12hrs then slowly weaned - No long-term complications
69Etomidate
70Etomidate
- Initially described for RSI in peds
- Rapid onset of sedation, brief half-life, short
recovery period and minimal effects on
cardiopulmonary systems - Adverse effects
- Potential for adrenal suppression
- Pain at injection site
- Myoclonus
- Quickly and easily induce deep sedation and/or
general anesthesia. - More studied for PSA in the adult population in
United States
71- Only randomized control trial evaluating
etomidate for pediatric PSA in the ED - Randomized double-blind study out of Montreal
- N100 patients 2-18yo
- 50 IV Etomidate 0.2mg/kg Fentanyl 1mcg/kg
- 50 IV Midazolam 0.1mg/kg Fentanyl 1mcg/kg
- Outcomes
- Induction and recovery times
- Efficacy of sedation
- Adverse event rates
72- Results
- Time taken for induction and recovery were lower
among those receiving etomidate - Success rates were not different
- Adverse event rates were similar with the
exception of - Pain at injection site 46 vs 12
- Myoclonus 22 vs 0
73Etomidate
- Need a large series to better establish the
safety profile of etomidate for PSA in pediatrics - A randomized trial comparing etomidate, propofol
and ketamine would be of great interest.. - Any takers?
74Propofol infusion syndrome
75Propofol Infusion Syndrome
- 1992 case reports of fatalities
- High and escalating doses of propofol infusions
- Severe metabolic acidosis, lipidemia, rhabdo and
refractory heart failure - Associated with long-term infusions gt48hrs in
children lt4yo - Thought to be related to a mitochondrial defect
- Not an issue for brief ED sedation
76Preoxygenation protocol
77Pre-oxygenation with procedural sedation
- Published adverse event rates during pediatric
ED procedural sedation vary between 2 and 18 - Consistently the most common adverse event is
transient hypoxia - Childrens basal oxygen use/kg is twice that of
adults - Smaller FRC
- Shorter safe apnea period before desaturation
- Transient hypoxia is predictably seen with
propofol - Very common with Midazolam and Fentanyl
- Less likely with Ketamine unless
co-administration with other resp depressants
78- 1244 procedural sedations
- Median age 5.9yrs
- Complications in 17.9
- No preoxygenation protocol
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