Title: Pediatric Anesthesia
1Pediatric Anesthesia
- Department of anesthesiology
- Cui Xiao Guang
2- The provision of safe anesthesia for pediatric
patients depends on a clear understanding of the
physiologic, pharmacologic, and psychological
differences between children and adults.
3- Neonates 01 months
- Infants 112 months
- Toddlers 13 years
- small children 412 years
4DEVELOPMENTAL PHYSIOLOGY OF THE INFANT
5The pulmonary system 1
- The relatively large size of the infant's tongue
- The larynx is located higher in the neck
- The epiglottis is shaped differently, being short
and stubby - The vocal cords are angled
- The infant larynx is funnel shaped, the narrowest
portion occurring at the cricoid cartilage
uncuffed endotracheal tubes patients younger
than 6 years.
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7The pulmonary system 2
- Alveoli increase in number and size until the
child is approximately 8 years old. - Functional residural capacity (FRC) the same
with adult induction and palinesthesia of
anesthesia is rapid - A-aDO2 is larger functional airway closure
- Limits oxygen reserves hypoxemia.
- The work of breathing (In premature infants)
- three times of adults,
- increased by cold stress or some degree
- of airway obstruction.
- RR two times of adults
8The pulmonary system 3
- Tidal volume(VT) is little physiological dead
space is 30 of VT - Airway resistance increasing secretion, upper
airway infection - Diaphragmatic and intercostal muscles do not
achieve the adult configuration of type I muscle
fibers until the child 2 years old apnea or
carbon dioxide retention and respiratory failure. - Infants have often been described as obligate
nasal breathers lt5 months of age.
9The Cardiovascular System1
- In uterus foramen ovale, ductus arteriosus
(right?left) - At birth the fetal circulation becomes an
adult-type circulation.-- transitional
circulation - Prolonged transitional circulation
- prematurity,
- infection,
- acidosis,
- pulmonary disease resulting in hypercarbia
or hypoxemia (aspiration of meconium), - hypothermia,
- congenital heart disease.
10The Cardiovascular System2
- The myocardial structure of the heart is less
developed, produce less compliant ventricles - This developmental myocardial immaturity
sensitivity to volume loading, - poor tolerance of increased afterload,
- heart rate-dependent cardiac output.
11The Cardiovascular System3
- Bradycardia and profound reductions in cardiac
output - activation of the parasympathetic nervous
system - hypoxia
- anesthetic overdose
- The sympathetic nervous system and baroreceptor
reflexes are not fully mature.
12The Kidneys
- Renal function is markedly diminished in neonates
and further diminished in preterm babies because
of low perfusion pressure and immature glomerular
and tubular function. - Nearly complete maturation approximately 20
weeks after birth - Complete maturation about 2 years of age
- dehydration
13The Liver 1
- The functional maturity of the liver is somewhat
incomplete. - Most enzyme systems for drug metabolism are
developed but not yet induced (stimulated) by the
drugs that they metabolize. - Jaundice decreased bilirubin breakdown
14The Liver 2
- A premature infant's liver has minimal glycogen
stores and is unable to handle large protein
loads - hypoglycemia
- acidemia
- failure to gain weight when the diet
contains too much protein. - The lower the albumin value, the less protein
binding and the greater the levels of free drug.
15The Gastrointestinal System
- At birth, gastric pH is alkalotic
- after birth the second day, pH is in the
normal - The ability to coordinate swallowing with
respiration does not fully mature until the
infant is 4 to 5 months of age gastroesophageal
reflux - If a developmental problem occurs within the
gastrointestinal system, symptoms will occur
within 24 to 36 hours of birth. - Upper --vomiting and regurgitation
- Lower --abdominal distention and failure
to pass meconium.
16Thermoregulation
- Thin skin, low fat content, and a higher surface
relative to weight allow greater heat loss to the
environment in neonates. ?? - Thermogenesis shivering and nonshivering
(metabolism of brown fat). - General anesthesia affects the metabolism of
brown fat.--hypothermia - Hypothermia delayed awakening from anesthesia,
cardiac irritability, respiratory depression,
increased pulmonary vascular resistance, and
altered drug responses.
17Central nervous system
- More fat is in the central nervous system
- Permeability of Blood brain barrier is great
opioiddecrement - bilirubinkernicterus
- MAC?
18Pharmacological Differences
- The response to medications
- body composition,
- protein binding,
- body temperature,
- distribution of cardiac output,
- functional maturity of the heart,
- maturation of the blood-brain barrier,
- the relative size (as well as functional
maturity) of the liver and kidneys, - the presence or absence of congenital
malformations
19Alterations in body composition have several
clinical implications for neonates
- a drug that is water soluble
- larger volume of distribution and larger
initial dose (e.g., succinylcholine) - less fat a drug that depends on redistribution
into fat for termination of its action will have
a longer clinical effect (e.g., thiopental) - a drug that redistributes into muscle
- longer clinical effect (e.g., fentanyl)
- Others
20Inhaled Anesthetics
- Nitrous oxide
- Halothane
- Enflurane
- Isoflurane
- Sevoflurane
- Desflurane
21Nitrous oxide
- lower dissolubility ?????????
- neonate pneumothorax, emphysema
- congenital diaphragmatic hernia or
acromphalus - necrotic enteritis
22Enflurane
- In the introduction of anesthesia
breathholding, cough, laryngospasm - After anesthesia seizure-like activity
23Isoflurane
- Introduction of anesthesia and analepsia
rapid - respiratory depression, coughing, laryngospasm
- After extubate
- incidence of laryngospasmlt enflurane
24Sevoflurane
- induction is slightly more rapid
- anesthesia is steady
- respiratory tract irritation small
- the production of toxic metabolites as a result
of interaction with the carbon dioxide absorbent
must be considered . - Introduction and short anesthesia sevoflurane
- Prolonged anesthesia elect other anesthetics
25Desflurane
- respiratory tract irritation strong
laryngospasm (?50) during the gaseous
induction of anesthesia - Concern for the potential for carbon monoxide
poisoning - Hypertension and tachycardia
26Intravenous anesthetics
- Ketamine
- Thiopental
- Propofol
- Etomidate
- Benzodiazepines diazepam, midazolam
- Opioids morphine, fentanyl, alfentanil,
sufentanil, remifentanil
27Ketamine 1
- Routes of administration
- intravenous 2 mg/kg
- intramuscular 5 to 10 mg/kg
- rectally 10 mg/kg
- orally 6 to 10 mg/kg
- intranasally 3 to 6 mg/kg
28Ketamine 2
- Undesirable side effects
- increased production of secretions
- vomiting
- postoperative "dreaming"
- hallucinations
- apnea
- laryngospasm
- increased intracranial pressure
- increased intraocular pressure
29Thiopental
- Intravenous 2.5 thiopental, 5 to 6 mg/kg
- Termination of effect occurs through
redistribution of the drug into muscle and fat - Thiopental should be used in reduced doses (2 to
4 mg/kg) in children who have low fat stores,
such as neonates or malnourished infants.
30Propofol
- Propofol is highly lipophilic and promptly
distributes into and out of vessel-rich organs. - Short duration rapid redistribution, hepatic
glucuronidation, and high renal clearance. - Dose 1-2 mg/kg
- higher in infants younger than 2
years - Pain lidocaine, ketamine
31Etomidate
- Pain, bucking.
- No commonly used
32Diazepam
- 0.1-0.3 mg/kg, orally provides
- may also be administered rectally
- has an extremely long half-life in neonates (80
hours) - Contraindicat until the infant is 6 months of
age or until hepatic metabolic pathways have
matured.
33Midazolam
- Midazolam is water soluble and therefore not
usually painful on intravenous administration. - Administration
- intravenous 0.05 to 0.08 mg/kg, maximum of
0.8mg (weightlt10 kg) - intramuscular 0.1 to 0.15 mg/kg, maximum
of 7.5 mg - oral 0.25 to 1.0 mg/kg, maximum of 20 mg
- rectal 0.75 to 1.0 mg/kg, maximum of 20 mg
- nasal 0.2 mg/kg
- sublingual 0.2 mg/kg
34Fentanyl
- Fentanyl
- rapid onset
- brief duration of action
- Dosage patient age, the surgical procedure, the
health of the patient, and the use of anesthetic
adjuvants.
35Alfentanil
- Eliminate more rapidly than fentanyl
- Pharmacokinetics independent of dose
- Margin of safety the greater the administered
dose, the greater the elimination. - Clearance of alfentanil may be increased in
children in comparison to adults
36Sufentanil
- use primarily for cardiac anesthesia
- Children are able to clear sufentanil more
rapidly than adults do. - Bradycardia and asystole when a vagolytic drug
was not administered simultaneously.
37Remifentanil
- Often use in pediatric anesthesia
38Muscle Relaxants
- Depolarizing Muscle Relaxant
- succinylcholine
- Nondepolarizing Muscle Relaxants
- Pancuronium, Vecuronium, Atracurium ,
Pipecuronium, Rocuronium
39Succinylcholine
- the dose required for intravenous administration
in infants (2.0 mg/kg) is approximately twice
that for older patients - Intravenous administration of atropine before
the first dose of succinylcholine may reduce the
incidence of arrhythmias
40 Pancuronium
- useful for longer procedures
- no histamine is released
- The disadvantage tachycardia
- Administration 0.1 mg/kg
41Vecuronium
- Vecuronium is useful for shorter procedures in
infants and children - no histamine is released
- Administration 0.1mg/kg
- Duration 20 30min
42Atracurium
- Useful for shorter procedures in infants and
children - Particularly useful in newborns and patients with
liver or renal disease. Why? - Administration0.3 0.5 mg/kg
- Duration gt30 min
43Rocuronium
- Rocuronium has a clinical profile similar to that
of vecuronium and atracurium - Advantage can be administered intramuscularly
44Preoperative Preparation(1)
- The preoperative visit and preparation of the
child for surgery are more important than the
choice of premedication - chart review, physical examination, and
furnishing of information regarding the
approximate time and length of surgery
45Preoperative Preparation(2)
- evaluates the medical condition of the child, the
needs of the planned surgical procedure, and the
psychological makeup of the patient and family - explain in great detail what the child and family
can expect and what will be done to ensure the
utmost safety
46Fasting
- milk and solids before 6 hours
- clear fluids up to 2-3 hours before induction
- Infants who are breast-fed may have their last
breast milk 4 hours before anesthetic induction
47Premedication (1)
- The need for premedication must be individualized
according to the underlying medical conditions,
the length of surgery, the desired induction of
anesthesia, and the psychological makeup of the
child and family
48Premeditation (2)
- A premedication is not normally necessary for the
usual 6-month-old child but is warranted for a
10- to 12-month-old who is afraid to be separated
from parents - Oral midazolam is the most commonly administered
premedication. - An oral dose of 0.25 to 0.33 mg/kg (maximum,
20 mg)
49Premeditation (3)
- Premedications may be administered orally,
intramuscularly, intravenously, rectally,
sublingually, or nasally - Although most of these routes are effective and
reliable, each has drawbacks
50Merits and drawbacks
- Oral or sublingual not hurt but may have a
slow onset or be spit out - Intramuscular and Intravenous painful and may
result in a sterile abscess - Rectal make the patient feel uncomfortable
- Nasal irritating, although absorption is rapid
51Premeditation (4)
- Midrange doses of intramuscular ketamine (3 to 5
mg/kg) combined with atropine (0.02 mg/kg) and
midazolam (0.05 mg/kg) will result in a deeply
sedated patient - Higher doses of intramuscular ketamine (up to 10
mg/kg) combined with atropine and midazolam may
be administered to patients with anticipated
difficult venous access to provide better
conditions for insertion of the intravenous line
52Induction of Anesthesia
- The method of inducing anesthesia is determined
by a number of factors - ? the medical condition of the patient,
- ? the surgical procedure,
- ? the level of anxiety of the child,
- ? the ability to cooperate and communicate
(because of age, developmental delay, language
barrier), - ? the presence or absence of a full
stomach, and other factors
53Rectal Induction of Anesthesia
- Rectal administration of 10 methohexital
reliably induces anesthesia within 8 to 10
minutes in 85 of young children and toddlers - The main advantage
- the child falls asleep in the parents arms,
- separates atraumatically from the parents.
- The main disadvantage drug absorption can be
either markedly delayed or very rapid
54Intramuscular Induction of Anesthesia
- Many medications, such as ketamine (2 to 10 mg/kg
combined with atropine and midazolam), or
midazolam alone (0.15 to 0.2 mg/kg), are
administered intramuscularly for premedication or
induction of anesthesia - The main advantage reliability
- the main disadvantage painful
55Intravenous Induction of Anesthesia
- Intravenous induction of anesthesia is the most
reliable and rapid technique - Intravenous induction may be preferable when
induction by mask is contraindicated (e.g., in
the presence of a full stomach) - The main disadvantage painful and threatening
for the child
56The Difficult Airway
- Difficult intubation
- maintain spontaneous respirations
- placing a stylet in the endotracheal
tube - fiberoptic brochoscope.
-
57The Child with Stridor (1)
- expiratory stridor
- intrathoracic airway obstruction ,
- . such as bronchiolitis, asthma, intrathoracic
foreign body - inspiratory stridor
- extrathoracic upper airway obstruction ,
- such as epiglottitis, laryngotracheobronchitis
, laryngeal foreign body -
58 When a child has upper airway obstruction (as in
epiglottitis, laryngotracheobronchitis, and
extrathoracic foreign body) (shaded area) and
struggles to breathe against this obstruction,
dynamic collapse of the trachea increases
59The Child with Stridor (2)
- maintaining spontaneous respiration
- Induction of anesthesia with halothane or
sevoflurane in oxygen by mask - With the patient lightly anesthetized and after
infiltration of local anesthetic, an intravenous
line is inserted - If stridor worsens or mild laryngospasm occurs,
the pop-off valve is closed sufficiently to
develop 10 to 15 cm H2 O of positive
end-expiratory airway pressure.
60 When a child has upper airway obstruction caused
by laryngospasm (A) or mechanical obstruction
(B), the application of approximately 10 cm H2 O
of positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) during
spontaneous breathing often relieves the
obstruction. That is, PEEP helps keep the vocal
cords apart (A) and the airway open (B, broken
lines)
61The Child with Stridor (3)
- A child with laryngotracheobronchitis or
epiglottitis usually requires an uncuffed
endotracheal tube that is 0.5 to 1.0 mm (internal
diameter) smaller than normal - total airway obstruction occur and mask
ventilation or endotracheal intubation not be
possible ----- tracheotomy
62The Child with a Full Stomach 1
- Children with a full stomach must be treated the
same as adults with a full stomach - child may be uncooperative and refuse to breathe
oxygen before induction of anesthesia
63The Child with a Full Stomach 2
- enrich the environment with a high flow of oxygen
- Additional equipment
- two suction catheters ,
- two appropriately sized laryngoscopes
- While the child is breathing oxygen, atropine
(0.02 mg/kg, up to 0.6 mg) may be administered
intravenously - cricoid cartilage
64Endotracheal Tubes
- For most children, the proper-size endotracheal
tube and the proper distance of insertion
relative to the alveolar ridge of the mandible or
maxilla are moderately constant.
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66- Tube diameter (in mm) age/44
- Infant 3 months to 1 year 10 cm
- Child 1 year 11 cm
- Child 2 year 12 cm
- Length of tube (in cm) age/212
- the tip of the endotracheal tube should pass
only 12 cm beyond an infant's glottis.
67The Dedicated Pediatric Equipment
- Rendell-Baker-Soucek mask
- Ayres T tube
- Jackson Rees improved type of Ayres T tube have
reservoir bag - airflow 1000 ml 100 mlBW(kg) /min
- ( weightlt10kg)
- Laryngeal mask
68Epidural anesthesia
Epidural block procedures sacral intervertebral
approach (1), lumbar approach (i.e., midline
route) (2), and thoracic approach (i.e., midline
route) (3).
69Local Anesthetics
- 0.81.5 lidocaine
- 0.10.2 tetracaine
- 0.250.5 bupivacaine
- 0.250.5 ropivacaine
70Caudal anesthesia
Caudal block procedure. A, Insertion of the
needle at right angles to the skin in relation to
the coccyx (1) and the sacrococcygeal membrane
(2). B, Cephalad redirection of the needle after
piercing the sacrococcygeal membrane.
71Spinal anesthesia
72Axillary approaches
Axillary approaches to the brachial plexus
classic approach (A) and transcoracobrachialis
approach (B), indicating the pectoralis major
muscle (1), axillary artery (2), and
coracobrachialis muscle (3).
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74Dose
75Monitoring
- The complexity of monitoring applied to pediatric
patients must be consistent with the severity of
the underlying medical condition and the planned
surgical procedure.
76Routine Monitoring
- precordial stethoscope,
- ? esophageal stethoscope,
- blood pressure cuff,
- electrocardiogram,
- temperature probe,
- pulse oximeter,
- end-tidal carbon dioxide monitor
77Invasive Monitoring
- Arterial catheter
- Central venous catheter
78Intravenous Fluid
- the high metabolic demands
- the high ratio of body surface area to weight.
79The basis for calculating
80Other
- Fluid deficits,
- Third-space losses,
- Modifications because of hypothermia or
hyperthermia, - Requirements caused by unusual metabolic demands
81- 50 of the resulting deficit is replaced in the
first hour and 25 in each of the next 2 hours. - Loss with the surgical procedure
- from 1 mL/kg/hr for a minor surgical
procedure to as much as 15 mL/kg/hr for major
abdominal procedures.
82The composition of the intravenous fluid
- Child with greater hypoxic brain damage
- high blood glucose levels,
- recommend not using glucose-containing
solutions routinely, especially for brief
operative procedures - All deficits and third-space losses
- A balanced salt solution (e.g., lactated
Ringer's solution) - Maintenance fluid
- 5 dextrose in 0.45 normal saline
- minimize the chance of hypoglycemia or
accidental hyperglycemia
83 General blood volume
- premature infant 100 to 120 mL/kg
- full-term infant 90 mL/kg
- child 3 to 12 months old 80 mL/kg
- child older than 1 year 70 mL/kg
- These are merely estimates of blood volume
84Simple formula
EBV(Starting hematocrit
Target hematocrit) MABL
Starting hematocrit
EBV estimated blood volume
Target hematocrit child younger than 3 months
--- gt35 child
older than 3 months --- 25-30
85Fluid replacememt and blood transfusion
- Blood loss lt1/3 MABL
- balanced solution
- balanced solutionvolume of blood loss 31
- Blood loss gt1/3 MABL
- colloid
- colloidvolume of blood loss 11
- Blood loss gt1MABL
- blood transfusion
86Volume of PRBCs
- (Desired
Hct Present Hct)EBVBW (kg) - Volume of PRBCs(ml)
-
Hematocrit of the PRBCs(60)
87Fresh Frozen Plasma
- PTgt15s or PTTgt 60s
- Fresh frozen plasma
88Platelets
- Thrombocytopenia lt15109/L
- idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura,
chemotherapy, - infection,
- disseminated intravascular coagulopathy
- Dilution during massive blood loss
- lt50109/L
89Postoperative Management
- Extubate
- Laryngospasm
- Bradycardia
- Glossoptosis
- Postoperative analgesia
- gt9 years, PCA
- lt9 years, Nurse controlled analgesia(NCA)
- morphine, 20µg/kg/h, hypodermical
injection or IM
90- Do not deck yourself up with fine clothew ,
- but enrich your mind with profound knowledge
-
- Thank you !