Bartoszek Michael, McGuire Jason M, Wilson J Tyler, Sorensen Jeffery S, Vice Taylor F R, Hudson Arlene J
Department of Anesthesia, Womack Army Medical Center, Fort Bragg, NC 28310, USA.
Department of Anesthesia, Fayetteville VA Medical Center, Fayetteville, NC 28301, USA.
Mil Med. 2023 Jan 4;188(1-2):e286-e294. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usab212.
Emergence delirium (ED) is characterized by agitation, confusion, and violent physical and verbal behavior associated with awakening from general anesthesia. Combat exposure among U.S. military veterans has been identified as a risk factor for ED. Preoperative baseline anxiety was shown to be a predictor of ED, and combat veterans are known to be at high risk for anxiety as well as depression and PTSD. Dexmedetomidine is an alpha-2 receptor agonist proven to mitigate ED in several patient populations. Perioperative use of dexmedetomidine demonstrated promising benefits in pediatric ED but has not been evaluated in combat veterans.
This study was a multi-site, prospective, randomized controlled investigation of 369 patients with a history of military combat exposure who were scheduled for elective surgery with a general anesthetic as the primary means of anesthesia. The trial was funded by the Tri-Service Nursing Research Program Grant HU0001-14-TS05 (N14-PO3) and approved by the Institutional Review Boards at the Naval Medical Center San Diego, Womack Army Medical Center, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, MD. All subjects were administered the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) to evaluate baseline anxiety. Those enrolled subjects with a low anxiety level (STAI < 39) (n = 215) were placed in the observational arm of the study. Those with a high anxiety level (STAI ≥ 39) were placed in the experimental arm (n = 153) and were further randomized to treatment with intraoperative dexmedetomidine infusion (1 μg/kg bolus at induction, followed by a 0.6 μg/kg/h infusion continued until emergence) (n = 75) or a placebo intraoperative infusion (n = 75). Following the delivery of the prescribed anesthetic, all subjects were observed for signs of ED using the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium (PAED) Scale. The patient and data recorder remained blinded to the randomization results.
The central tendencies of demographics and clinical characteristics are reported. PAED among those randomized to dexmedetomidine (median 7, interquartile interval (IQI) 5.2-9.2) tended to be less (P < .0001) than that of those randomized to control (median 12, IQI 10-13). Dexmedetomidine was found to be the most important predictor of PAED (35% relative importance), followed by Patient Health Questionnaire (14%), STAI-Trait (9%), and PTSD Checklist-Military Version (8%); the overall rankings are featured. Randomization to receipt of dexmedetomidine was associated with a 3.7-unit reduction (95% CI 2.5-4.9) in PAED (P < .001) in a linear model controlling for several variables, and the directionality of the effect persisted upon regularization in a penalized linear model.
Dexmedetomidine was effective at reducing PAED among combat veterans who were experiencing symptoms of pre-operative anxiety (i.e., STAI-State ≥39). Although psychological morbidity is not unique to the military population, combat veterans carry some of the highest rates of anxiety, PTSD and depression compared to the general population. Dexmedetomidine can be safety employed by anesthesia providers to reduce symptoms of ED in the perioperative period. The double-blind randomized, controlled study design strengthens our analyses; however, this study did not control for the type of surgical procedure or the duration of anesthetic. Furthermore, we only enrolled patients with combat exposure experiencing symptoms of anxiety and did not investigate the role of dexmedetomidine in combat veterans with less anxiety. Further study of the relationship between psychological comorbidities, ED, and dexmedetomidine is warranted.
苏醒期谵妄(ED)的特征为躁动、意识混乱以及与全身麻醉苏醒相关的暴力身体和言语行为。美国退伍军人中的战斗经历已被确定为ED的一个风险因素。术前基线焦虑被证明是ED的一个预测指标,并且已知战斗退伍军人患焦虑症、抑郁症和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的风险很高。右美托咪定是一种α-2受体激动剂,已被证明可在多个患者群体中减轻ED。围手术期使用右美托咪定在儿科ED中显示出有前景的益处,但尚未在战斗退伍军人中进行评估。
本研究是一项多中心、前瞻性、随机对照研究,纳入了369例有军事战斗经历且计划接受择期手术并以全身麻醉作为主要麻醉方式的患者。该试验由三军护理研究计划资助(拨款HU0001 - 14 - TS05,N14 - PO3),并获得了圣地亚哥海军医疗中心、沃马克陆军医疗中心、沃尔特里德国家军事医疗中心以及马里兰州贝塞斯达的军医大学统一服务大学机构审查委员会的批准。所有受试者均接受状态 - 特质焦虑量表(STAI)评估基线焦虑水平。那些焦虑水平较低(STAI<39)的入选受试者(n = 215)被纳入研究的观察组。那些焦虑水平较高(STAI≥39)的受试者被纳入实验组(n = 153),并进一步随机分为术中输注右美托咪定治疗组(诱导时静脉推注1μg/kg,随后以0.6μg/kg/h持续输注直至苏醒)(n = 75)或术中输注安慰剂组(n = 75)。在给予规定的麻醉后,使用小儿麻醉苏醒期谵妄(PAED)量表观察所有受试者的ED体征。患者和数据记录员对随机分组结果保持盲态。
报告了人口统计学和临床特征的集中趋势。随机接受右美托咪定治疗的患者的PAED评分(中位数7,四分位间距(IQI)5.2 - 9.2)往往低于随机接受对照组治疗的患者(中位数12,IQI 10 - 13)(P<0.0001)。发现右美托咪定是PAED的最重要预测因素(相对重要性为( [35%])),其次是患者健康问卷(( [14%]))、STAI - 特质量表(( [9%]))和PTSD检查表 - 军事版(( [8%]));列出了总体排名。在控制多个变量的线性模型中,随机接受右美托咪定治疗与PAED评分降低3.7分(95%置信区间2.5 - 4.9)相关(P<0.001),并且在惩罚线性模型中进行正则化后效应的方向性仍然存在。
右美托咪定在减轻有术前焦虑症状(即STAI - 状态≥39)的战斗退伍军人的PAED方面是有效的。虽然心理疾病并非军人所特有,但与普通人群相比,战斗退伍军人患焦虑症(PTSD)和抑郁症的比例是最高的。麻醉提供者可以安全地使用右美托咪定来减轻围手术期ED的症状。双盲随机对照研究设计加强了我们的分析;然而,本研究未控制手术类型或麻醉持续时间。此外,我们仅纳入了有战斗经历且有焦虑症状的患者,未研究右美托咪定在焦虑程度较低的战斗退伍军人中的作用。有必要进一步研究心理共病、ED和右美托咪定之间的关系。