From the Division of Pediatrics, Medical University of South Carolina Children's Hospital, Charleston, SC.
Pediatr Emerg Care. 2021 Nov 1;37(11):e700-e706. doi: 10.1097/PEC.0000000000002289.
The aim of the study was to evaluate, in children undergoing procedural sedation for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, whether lower doses of propofol than previously published permitted a high rate of successful MRI completion, whether lower dosages result in a more rapid recovery, and whether age or behavioral diagnosis increases propofol requirements.
After institutional review board approval, we retrospectively reviewed the pediatric sedation team's sedation database of children receiving propofol infusion for MRI scans between 2007 and 2016. Data collected included propofol induction dose (in milligrams per kilogram), propofol infusion dose (in micrograms per kilogram per hour), total propofol dose (in milligrams per kilogram and in milligrams per kilogram per hour), and the number of administered ancillary sedative medications. Additional data included the American Society of Anesthesiologist status, sedation duration, recovery duration, and successful completion of MRI. Dosing data were also stratified by age.
A total of 2354 patients met inclusion criteria. Eight percent of patients received propofol infusion alone, 79% received midazolam before their propofol induction, and 13% received a combination of propofol and other drugs. Mean induction dose was 2.2 + 0.9 mg/kg, mean infusion dose was 93.5 + 29.0 μg/kg per minute, and total mean dose was 9.0 + 3.0 mg/kg per hour. Mean recovery time was 44 minutes, and 99.3% of the scans were completed with good images. We noted an increase requirement in the mean induction dose and total dose in children younger than 1 year.
Propofol infusion doses lower than commonly reported permit successful completion of scans and similar recovery times in a single institution. Younger children require more propofol for successful procedural sedation.
本研究旨在评估在接受磁共振成像(MRI)扫描的儿童中,与先前发表的剂量相比,较低剂量的异丙酚是否可以提高 MRI 完成率,是否可以加快恢复速度,以及年龄或行为诊断是否会增加异丙酚的需求。
在机构审查委员会批准后,我们回顾性地审查了 2007 年至 2016 年间接受异丙酚输注用于 MRI 扫描的儿科镇静团队镇静数据库。收集的数据包括异丙酚诱导剂量(毫克/千克)、异丙酚输注剂量(微克/千克/小时)、总异丙酚剂量(毫克/千克和毫克/千克/小时)和辅助镇静药物的给药次数。其他数据包括美国麻醉医师协会(ASA)状态、镇静持续时间、恢复时间和 MRI 完成情况。剂量数据也按年龄分层。
共有 2354 名患者符合纳入标准。8%的患者单独接受异丙酚输注,79%的患者在异丙酚诱导前接受咪达唑仑,13%的患者接受异丙酚和其他药物的联合治疗。平均诱导剂量为 2.2±0.9mg/kg,平均输注剂量为 93.5±29.0μg/kg/分钟,总平均剂量为 9.0±3.0mg/kg/小时。平均恢复时间为 44 分钟,99.3%的扫描图像良好。我们注意到 1 岁以下儿童的平均诱导剂量和总剂量增加。
在单一机构中,低于常用剂量的异丙酚输注可成功完成扫描并具有相似的恢复时间。较小的儿童需要更多的异丙酚来成功进行程序镇静。