Title: Conscious Sedation
1Conscious Sedation
- Timothy Sauvage
- CRNA, MS, ARNP
2- The goal of conscious sedation is to produce a
state where - Patients are able to tolerate unpleasant
procedures - Adequate cardio-respiratory function is
maintained - Patients are able to respond purposely to verbal
commands and or tactile stimulation
3- The ASA practice guidelines for conscious
sedation by non-anesthesiologists state that
conscious sedation should result in a patient who
is lightly sedated, cooperative on demand,
amnesic, and free from pain and anxiety.
4- The JCAHO defines conscious sedation as,
moderate sedation/analgesia - It also states that the patient should be able to
respond purposely to verbal commands, either
alone or accompanied by light tactile
stimulation. - It further states that no further interventions
are required to maintain a patients airway, that
spontaneous ventilation is adequate, and that
cardiovascular function is usually maintained.
5Patient Evaluation
- A patient history , physical examination
including height, weight, assessment of airway
patency, auscultation of the lungs and heart, and
laboratory evaluation based on the patient's
underlying medical condition, all should be
performed. the patient's medical history should
include
6- All current medications and drug allergies
- Meperidine (demerol) is contraindicated in a
patient taking monomine oxidase inhibitors
(maoi), discontinue the maoi two weeks before
administration of demerol. - Opioids (fentanyl) and CNS depressants can
increase the potential for apnea and
over-sedation when administered with a
benzodiazepam (versed)
7- Diazepam clearance and not midazolam is decreased
and its half-life increased with cimetidine - Indinavir and saquinavir may inhibit the
metabolism of midazolam and increase the
potential for prolonged sedation - Ritonavir can greatly increase the plasma
concentration of midazolam, diazapam, and
meperidine and therefore should not be used in a
patient taking ritonavir
8- Previous adverse effects to conscious sedation
- Time and nature of last oral intake
- clear liquids greater than 2-3 hours
- solids greater than 6-8 hours
- History of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drug use
- Any abnormalities of major organ function
9Airway Evaluation
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15Airway Evaluation
- Airway examination should always include
- Overall Appearance
- Mouth
- Movement
- Palpation
- Nose
16Overall Appearance
- Neck
- stout or thin?
- long or short?
- Sunken cheeks?
- Presence of a beard may make fitting the mask on
the face difficult.
17Mouth
- Mouth opening (measured in cm or fingerbreadth)
- Anterior displacement of mandible
- Tongue size
- Visibility of uvula
- Protrusion of upper incisors
- Loose or damaged teeth prostheses
18Movement
- Flexion/extension of neck
- Sniffing position
19Palpation
- Trachea in midline
- Distance from mentum to hyoid
20Nose
- Both nares patent
- Protuberant nose suggests poor mask fit and
difficult mask ventilation.
21Size of tongue in relation to the size of the
oral cavity
This test is performed with the patient in the
sitting position, the head held in a neutral
position, the mouth wide open, and the tongue
protruding to the maximum.
(Malampati Classification)
22Malampati Classification (mod.)
- Class 1
- Soft palate
- Fauces
- Uvula
- Anterior and posterior faucial pilars can be
seen.
23- Class 2
- Soft palate
- Fauces
- Uvula can be seen
- The tongue masks anterior and posterior faucial
pillars.
24- Class 3
- Soft palate
- Base of uvula can be seen only
25- Class 4
- Only hard palate is visible
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27Laryngoscopic View
28- Grade I
- Visualization of entire laryngeal aperture.
29- Grade II
- Visualization of only posterior portion of the
laryngeal aperture.
30- Grade III
- Visualization of only the epiglottis.
31- Grade IV
- Visualization of only the soft palate.
32Atlanto-occipital joint extension
- The alignment of the oral, pharyngeal, and
laryngeal axes into a straight line (sniffing
position). - This will allow less of the tongue obscuring the
laryngeal view and there will be much less need
for displacing the tongue anteriorly.
33Thyro-mental distance
- The space anterior to the larynx determines how
readily the laryngeal axis will fall in line with
the pharyngeal axis when the atlanto-occipital
joint is extended. - When there is a large mandibular space, the
tongue is easily contained within this large
compartment and does not have to be pulled
maximally forward in order to reveal the larynx. - The distance between inside the mandible to hyoid
bone should be greater than 6 cm or 3
fingerbreadths. - NECK
- Neck examination should be performed as part of
airway evaluation. Presence of carotid bruit,
midline masses which can deviate or compress the
trachea.
34Predictors of a Difficult Airway
- Short muscular neck
- Prominent upper incisors
- Protruding mandible
- Receding mandible
- Small mouth opening
- Full beard
- Large tongue
- Limited neck mobility
- Limited mouth opening due to TMJ
35Short muscular neck
36Prominent upper incisors
37Protruding mandible
38Receding mandible
39Small mouth opening
40Full beard
41Large tongue
42Limited neck mobility
43Limited mouth opening due to TMJ
44Summary of Airway Evaluation
- A thorough assessment of your patients anatomy
will provide you the knowledge necessary to
perform safe, conscious sedation. - It is the lack of preparation
and understanding that often
makes the simplest sedation,
the one most difficult to
perform.
45Conscious Sedation Drugs
- Fentanyl
- Versed
- Propofol
- Demerol
- Morphine
- Lidocaine
46Fentanyl
- Uses
- Sedation, relief of pain
- How does it work
- Binds to opioid receptors throughout the CNS
(this includes the respiratory center in the
brain) - Once bound it opens potassium channels and
inhibits calcium channels from functioning. - This receptor activity results in an increase in
pain threshold, alters pain perception, and
inhibits pain to travel to the brain and be
recognized. - Remember The respiratory depression of the drug
may last longer than the analgesic effect.
47- Dosing
- I.V., onset of the drug is 7 to 15 minutes and
will last 30 to 60 minutes - Distribution
- Distributes to muscle and fat, highly lipophilic
- Metabolism
- Liver
- Usual dosing
- Titration, titration, titration, to appropriate
response and desired degree of conscious sedation - Initial I.V. dose 25-50 mcg and then titrate
upward. pump infusion would range 1-3 mcg/kg/hr
48- Adverse reaction
- ( gt10) bradycardia, hypotension, vasodilatation
- (lt10) apnea, post procedure respiratory
depression - Ethanol
- Avoid ethanol due to the fact it may increase CNS
depression - Herbs
- St. John's wort may decrease fentanyl levels,
- Avoid valerian, St. John's wort, kava kava, gotu
kola (may decrease CNS depression)
49Versed (Midazolam)
- Uses
- Preoperative sedation and provides conscious
sedation prior to diagnostic or radiographic
procedures, ICU sedation, and anesthesia delivery - How does it work
- Depresses the CNS by binding to the
benzodiazepine site on the GABA receptor
modulating GABA activity. - GABA is the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in
the brain
50- Dosing
- The dose of midazolam needs to be individualized
based on the patient's age, underlying diseases,
and concurrent medication. - Decrease the dose by 30 if narcotics or other
CNS depressants are administered together.
Personnel and equipment needed for standard
respiratory resuscitation should be immediately
available during midazolam administration. - Adult dosing for conscious sedation I.V. initial
dose 0.5 - 2.0 mg given slowly over 2 minutes and
titrating to desired effect and possibly
repeating the dose slowly over 2-3 minutes.
Medicate, wait, evaluate, re-medicate, and
re-evaluate. - If narcotics or other CNS depressants are
administered concomitantly, the midazolam dose
should be decreased by 30. Usual total dose of
2.5-5.0, use decreased dosing in the elderly and
rarely should you give greater than 3.5 mg total - Distribution
- Will increase with congestive heart failure and
renal failure - Metabolism
- Liver
51- Adverse reactions
- (gt 10) respiratory, decreased tidal volume and
or inspiratory rate decrease to apnea - (lt 10) hypotension, dizziness, coughing
- Ethanol
- Avoid alcohol because of the CNS depression
- Herbs
- Avoid concurrent use with St. John's wort due to
increase in CNS depression. - Avoid concurrent use with valerian, kava kava,
gotu kola, also due to CNS depression
52 Propofol (Diprivan)
- Uses
- Monitored anesthesia care sedation, during
diagnostic procedures, sedation for ICU patients
on the ventilator provided they are at least 18
years old - How does it work
- The mechanism proposed is that it is GABA
receptor mediated but the exact mechanism is
unknown
53- Dosing
- Must be individualized based on total body weight
and titrated to the clinical desired effect,
wait at least 3-5 minutes between dosage
adjustments to clinically assess drug effects,
smaller doses are required when used with
narcotics. - For conscious sedation in the adult, initial
dosing should be 100-150 mcg/kg/minute for three
to five minutes or slow injection of 0.5 mg/kg
over 3-5 minutes. - For the debilitated/elderly doses should be
decreased and titrated slowly to effect.
maintenance of sedation, use variable rates 25-75
mcg/kg/minute via infusion and incremental bolus
doses 10-20 mg. in the debilitated patient you
should decrease their dose by 20 - Distribution
- Large volume of distribution
- Metabolism
- Liver to water-soluble sulfate and glucuronide
conjugates
54- Adverse reactions
- ( gt10) hypotension, burning at site of injection
by using a large vein or a central vein, apnea
episodes - (lt10) hypertension, movement, itching,
respiratory acidosis - Drug interactions
- Central nervous system depressants additive CNS
depression and respiratory depression may require
dosage reduction when used with anesthetics,
benzodiazepines, opiates, ethanol, and
phenothiazines. - Narcotics
- Concomitant use may lead to increased sedative or
anesthetic effects of propofol, more pronounced
decreases in systolic, diastolic, and mean
arterial pressures and cardiac output. Pediatric
patients receiving fentanyl may also become
bradycardic with the addition of propofol. - Theophylline
- May antagonize the effects of propofol and
therefore, require more drugs be given.
55Demerol (Meperidine)
- Uses
- Management of moderate to severe pain adjunct to
anesthesia and preoperative sedation - How does it work
- Binds to opioid receptors throughout the CNS.
- When the drug binds to the receptor the effects
are excreted by K channel opening and CA
channel inhibition. - This action will result in an increase in pain
threshold, alter pain perception, and inhibit
ascending pain pathways.
56- Dosing
- Doses should be titrated to the desired analgesic
effect. - Adults receiving I.V. Demerol will need 50-150
mg/dose every 3-4 hours as needed. - Distribution
- Crosses the placenta and appears in breast milk,
highly protein bound - Metabolism
- Liver, with liver disease the half life may
increase to 11 hours which is approximately 3
times longer
57- Adverse reactions
- Do not use with mao inhibitors presently or
within 14 days, hypotension, fatigue, rash,
dyspnea, phenytoin may decrease the analgesic
effects - Ethanol
- Avoid due to CNS depression,
- Herbs
- Avoid valerian, St. John's wort, kavaq kava, gotu
kola - may increase the CNS depression
58Morphine (morphine sulfate)
- Uses
- Relief of moderate to severe pain and chronic
pain. - How does it work
- Binds to opiate receptors in the CNS and exerts
via K channel opening and inhibition of CA
channels, causing inhibition of ascending pain
pathways, altering the perception of and response
to pain, produces generalized CNS depression
59- Dosing
- Should be titrated I.V. to effect.
- Do not mix routes of administration.
- I.V. dosing is 2.5-20 mg/dose every 2-6 hours as
needed, usual 10mg/dose every 4 hours as needed.
- Continuous I.V. infusion 0.8-10mg/hr and may
increase with pain, usual range is up to
80mg/hour. - Elderly and debilitated require less of the drug.
- Metabolized
- in the liver
60- Adverse reaction
- flushing, CNS depression, drowsiness, sedation,
dependence - (gt10) hypotension, drowsiness, pruritus, nausea,
urinary retention, generalized weakness. - (lt10) restlessness, visual problems, anorexia,
respiratory depression. - Ethanol
- Avoid any alcohol due to CNS depression
- Avoid CNS depressants, and antidepressants.
- Herbs
- Avoid valerian, St. John's wort, kava kava, gotu
kola - may increase CNS depression.
61Lidocaine
- Topical application for EGD should not be
forgotten. - Patients may gargle with 4 lidocaine and are
then told to swallow it. If the patient still has
a gag reflex after 10 minutes, then they may be
orally sprayed with additional 4 lidocaine to
get rid of the gag reflex. - Is there a potential problem here?
62Drug Antagonists
63Narcan
- used for partial or total reversal of opioids
depression, including respiratory depression. - It does this by competing for the receptor that
the narcotic is also seeking. - The antagonist when it gets on the receptor site
will remain there until it is metabolized and no
longer functional. - Onset
- When administered I.V., the onset is within two
minutes and will last up to 60 minutes, but the
narcan will wear off before the narcotic will and
therefore will require additional dosing.
64- Dosing
- Adults I.V. 0.4-2 mg every 2-3 minutes as needed,
may need to repeat dose every 20-60 minutes. - Note use 0.1-0.2 mg increments in patients who
are opioid dependent and in postoperative
patients to avoid large cardiovascular changes.
I.V. push should include all the drug
incrementally injected over be - Adverse reactions
- Patients may respond quickly and be in a state of
confusion. Narcotic addicts may seize after
receiving this drug. - Remember, slow titration to effect and even then
do not be surprised to see withdrawal symptoms in
those patients who were addicted to narcotics.
65Flumazenil
- is a benzodiazepine antagonist that functions to
reverse the sedative effects of the
benzodiazepines. - It is receptor specific and does not reverse
narcotics, alcohol, or herbs. It blocks the
benzodiazepine effect on the GABA benzodiazepine
receptor. - Onset
- is 1-3 minutes with 80 response in 3 minutes.
- The effect of the antagonist will not outlast the
versed (benzodiazepine) and will require
additional dosing.
66- Dosing
- Adult dosing for reversal of conscious sedation
via I.V. route is an initial dose of 0.2 mg given
over 15 minutes. - If the desired level of consciousness is not met
then repeat dosing of 0.2 mg may be given at 1
minute intervals. In the event of re-sedation, 1
mg doses may be repeated at 20 minute intervals
with a maximum of 1 mg/dose and 3mg per hour. - Adverse effects
- Nausea and vomiting, palpitations, headache,
anxiety, tremor, hyperventilation, euphoria. - Remember, slow titration to effect and you still
may see symptoms of withdrawal.
67Summary of Sedation Drugs
- For all conscious sedation drugs
- Combination of opioids and sedatives may increase
the incidence of adverse effects. - When used together, each agent should be
administered individually in order to allow the
desired effect of each agent to be achieved. - When given I.V., conscious sedation drugs should
be administered in small, incremental doses until
the desired effect is achieved (titrate to
effect).
68- Care and patience must be taken to allow a
sufficient time between doses to allow the effect
of each dose to be seen. - Dosage reductions may be required in the
chronically ill or elderly as well as with the
concomitant administration of an opioid and a
sedative agent (benzodiazepine). - Additional time should be allowed between doses
when drugs are administered via nonintravenous
routes secondary to the time required for drug
absorption.
69- Monitoring requirements
- Drug administered
- Oxygen saturation
- Response to verbal commands
- Pulmonary ventilation
- Blood pressure and heart rate
- EKG
- ETCO2
- The above monitoring modalities should be
recorded prior to the procedure, then every 5
minutes throughout the procedure. - If patient condition warrants taking vital signs
more frequently, then do it.
70NPO Status
- Clear fluids - Can I see through it?
- Avoid for 2-3 hours prior to procedure
- black coffee
- hot tea
- ice tea
- apple juice
- cranberry juice
- grape juice
- plain jello
- sport drinks
71- Not clear fluids I can't see through it
- Avoid for 6-8 hours prior to procedure
- coffee with milk/cream
- hot tea with milk/cream
- orange juice with pulp
- tomato juice
- milk
72- Solid food
- Avoid for 6-8 hours prior to procedure
- coordinate with diabetics
73Past Trauma
- Dental work
- fractured jaw
- Motor vehicle accidents
- fractured nose, jaw, facial bones
- neck injuries leaving limited range of motion
with flexion and extension - Cancer radiation of neck /mandible
- Surgery
- radical neck
- cervical fusion
- jaw wiring
- Brain injury
- communication
- respiratory involvement
- Current medication
- opioids
- benzodiazepines
- NSAIDs
- aspirin
74Blood Tests (may not be necessary)
- Hemostasis
- INR 1-1.3
- Pt  20-40
- PTT lt 35 sec
- Bleeding Time, 3-8 minutes
PTT Â Pt BT
Oral Coagulents    I/NC  I NC
Aspirin  NC   NC I
Heparin I I/NC NC
75Sleep Apnea
- Problem
- People stop breathing repeatedly during sleep due
to physical blockage of the airway during sleep,
this may occur hundreds of times per night and
often for a minute or more. - There are three different types of apnea
central, obstructive, and mixed, of the three,
obstructive is most common.
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77- Treatment
- positioning - avoid supine
- weight loss
- avoid alcohol
- avoid CNS depressants
- oral bite block appliances
- surgery
- CPAP
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79CPAP Application
- Works as a pneumatic splint by providing a flow
of continuous positive air pressure through a
nasal/nasal-oral mask to keep the airway open
during sleep. - This keeps the throat open and eliminates snoring
and obstruction.
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81Conclusion
- Complete history and physical
- Provide appropriate monitoring and special needs
for patient - Administer (titrate) medications in a timely,
accurate manner - Antagonist availability
- Appropriate lab work
- Be and feel prepared
- Evaluate, titrate, re-evaluate
82Questions?
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89ETCO2
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