Brown Karen A, Laferrière André, Moss Immanuela Ravé
Division of Pediatric Anesthesia, McGill University Health Centre/Montreal Children's Hospital, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Anesthesiology. 2004 Apr;100(4):806-10; discussion 5A. doi: 10.1097/00000542-200404000-00009.
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) in children is often associated with recurrent hypoxemia during sleep. In developing animals, central opioid neuropeptide content is high, and opioid receptors are up-regulated after recurrent hypoxia. The authors hypothesized that children with recurrent hypoxemia due to OSA might have altered central opioid functionality that could affect their responsiveness to opioid drugs. Using a retrospective database, we assessed the relation of age and preoperative oxygen saturation to the cumulative postoperative morphine dose administered for analgesia in children with OSA undergoing adenotonsillectomy.
Inclusion criteria were (1) adenotonsillectomy for OSA; (2) no concomitant pathology; (3) intraoperative administration of short-acting opioid drugs; (4) endotracheal extubation on awakening in the operating room; and (5) morphine as the parenteral, postoperative analgesic.
Forty-six children (16 girls) fulfilled the inclusion criteria. Age and preoperative arterial oxygen saturation (SaO2) nadir, either individually (P = 0.023, P = 0.0003, respectively) or in combination (P = 0.00009), exhibited a significant correlation to the morphine dose required for analgesia. Four of these children, aged 26.5 +/- 13.2 months, with a preoperative SaO2 nadir of 70.3 +/- 12.9%, did not require any postoperative morphine for analgesia at all.
The authors speculate that the reduced morphine requirement for analgesia in children displaying oxygen desaturation associated with severe OSA may be related to their young age and to an up-regulation of central opioid receptors consequent to recurrent hypoxemia. In evaluating OSA in children, preoperative determination of the SaO2 nadir is important for predicting the postoperative opioid dosage required for analgesia.
儿童阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)常与睡眠期间反复出现的低氧血症相关。在发育中的动物中,中枢阿片类神经肽含量较高,且反复缺氧后阿片受体上调。作者推测,因OSA导致反复低氧血症的儿童可能存在中枢阿片类功能改变,这可能影响他们对阿片类药物的反应性。我们利用回顾性数据库,评估了年龄和术前氧饱和度与接受腺样体扁桃体切除术的OSA儿童术后镇痛所用吗啡累积剂量之间的关系。
纳入标准为:(1)因OSA行腺样体扁桃体切除术;(2)无合并症;(3)术中使用短效阿片类药物;(4)在手术室苏醒时气管插管拔除;(5)吗啡作为术后胃肠外镇痛药物。
46名儿童(16名女孩)符合纳入标准。年龄和术前动脉血氧饱和度(SaO2)最低点,无论是单独(分别为P = 0.023,P = 0.0003)还是联合(P = 0.00009),均与镇痛所需吗啡剂量显著相关。其中4名儿童,年龄为26.5±13.2个月,术前SaO2最低点为70.3±12.9%,术后完全不需要任何吗啡镇痛。
作者推测,伴有严重OSA且出现氧饱和度下降的儿童镇痛所需吗啡减少,可能与其年龄较小以及反复低氧血症导致中枢阿片受体上调有关。在评估儿童OSA时,术前测定SaO2最低点对于预测术后镇痛所需阿片类药物剂量很重要。