van Loon Kim, van Rheineck Leyssius Aart T, van Zaane Bas, Denteneer Mirjam, Kalkman Cor J
From the Department of Anesthesiology, Division of Anesthesiology Intensive Care and Emergency Medicine, University Medical Center Utrecht, Utrecht; and Casa Clinics Leiden, CASA Netherlands, the Netherlands.
Anesth Analg. 2014 Jul;119(1):49-55. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0b013e3182a1f0a2.
Propofol, a short-acting hypnotic drug, is increasingly administered by a diverse group of specialists (e.g., cardiologists, gastroenterologists) during diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Standard monitoring during sedation comprises continuous pulse oximetry with visual assessment of the patient's breathing pattern. Because undetected hypoventilation is a common pathway for complications, capnographic monitoring of exhaled carbon dioxide has been advocated. We examined whether the use of capnography reduces the incidence of hypoxemia during nonanesthesiologist-administered propofol sedation in patients who did not receive supplemental oxygen routinely.
An open, stratified, randomized controlled trial was conducted in 427 healthy adult women during minor gynecology procedures in an outpatient clinic in the Netherlands. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either standard respiratory monitoring (standard care) or standard respiratory monitoring combined with capnography (capnography group). To replicate usual clinical practice, capnography monitoring was performed by the same medical team that provided sedation. The primary end point was the incidence of hypoxemia, defined as oxygen saturations <91%.
From April 2010 to January 2011, 427 patients were enrolled. In the capnography group, 206 patients and in the standard care group, 209 patients were analyzed. The percentage of patients with a hypoxemic episode was 25.7% (53 of 206) in the capnography group and 24.9% (52 of 209) in the standard care group, resulting in an absolute difference of 0.8% (-7.5 to 9.2%).
We were unable to confirm an additive role for capnography in preventing hypoxemia during elective nonanesthesiologist-administered propofol (monotherapy) sedation in healthy women in whom supplemental oxygen is not routinely administered. Based on the confidence interval, the benefit of adding capnography is at most an absolute hypoxemia reduction of 7.5%, suggesting that adding it in this practice setting to the routine monitoring strategy does not necessarily improve patient safety in daily practice.
丙泊酚是一种短效催眠药物,越来越多的不同专业的医生(如心脏病专家、胃肠病专家)在诊断和治疗过程中使用它。镇静期间的标准监测包括持续脉搏血氧饱和度监测以及对患者呼吸模式的视觉评估。由于未被检测到的通气不足是并发症的常见原因,因此提倡使用二氧化碳波形图监测呼出的二氧化碳。我们研究了在未常规接受补充氧气的患者中,使用二氧化碳波形图监测是否能降低非麻醉医生给予丙泊酚镇静期间低氧血症的发生率。
在荷兰一家门诊诊所对427名健康成年女性进行了一项开放、分层、随机对照试验,这些女性接受小型妇科手术。患者被随机分配接受标准呼吸监测(标准护理组)或标准呼吸监测结合二氧化碳波形图监测(二氧化碳波形图组)。为了模拟常规临床实践,由提供镇静的同一医疗团队进行二氧化碳波形图监测。主要终点是低氧血症的发生率,定义为氧饱和度<91%。
从2010年4月至2011年1月,共纳入427例患者。分析了二氧化碳波形图组的206例患者和标准护理组的209例患者。二氧化碳波形图组低氧血症发作患者的百分比为25.7%(206例中的53例),标准护理组为24.9%(209例中的52例),绝对差异为0.8%(-7.5%至9.2%)。
我们无法证实二氧化碳波形图监测在未常规接受补充氧气的健康女性接受择期非麻醉医生给予丙泊酚(单一疗法)镇静期间预防低氧血症方面具有额外作用。基于置信区间,添加二氧化碳波形图监测的最大益处是绝对低氧血症发生率降低7.5%,这表明在这种实践环境中将其添加到常规监测策略中不一定能改善日常实践中的患者安全性。