Lee Seohee, Sohn Jin Young, Hwang In Eob, Lee Ho-Jin, Yoon Susie, Bahk Jae-Hyon, Kim Bo Rim
Department of Anaesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Anaesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Korea University Guro Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
Br J Anaesth. 2023 Apr;130(4):439-445. doi: 10.1016/j.bja.2022.12.009. Epub 2023 Jan 23.
An orientation strategy providing repeated verbal reminders of time, place, and person has been widely used for the non-pharmacological management of delirium. We hypothesised that using this strategy could reduce emergence agitation and improve recovery profiles.
This prospective observer-blinded RCT included male and female patients aged 18-70 yr undergoing minimally invasive abdominal surgery. During emergence from general anaesthesia, subjects in the orientation group (n=57) were provided a repeated reminder, including orientation: '(Patient's name), you are now recovering from general anaesthesia after surgery at Seoul National University Hospital, open your eyes!' via noise-cancelling headphones, whereas those in the control group (n=57) only heard their name: '(Patient's name), open your eyes!'. The primary outcome was the incidence of emergence agitation (Riker sedation agitation scale [SAS] ≥5). The incidence of dangerous agitation (SAS=7), maximal SAS score in the operating room, and recovery profile until 24 h postoperatively were evaluated as secondary outcomes.
The incidence of emergence agitation in the operating room was significantly lower in the orientation group than in the control group (16/57 [28.1%] vs 38/57 [66.7%]; relative risk [95% confidence interval], 0.5 [0.3-0.7]; P<0.001). The incidence of dangerous agitation (0 [0.0%] vs 10 [17.5%], P=0.001) and the median maximal SAS score (4 [4-5] vs 5 [4-6], P<0.001) were also lower in the orientation group. Secondary outcomes, other than agitation-related variables, were comparable between the two groups.
Repeated verbal stimulation of orientation may serve as a simple and easily applicable strategy to reduce emergence agitation after general anaesthesia.
NCT05105178.
一种通过反复口头提醒时间、地点和人物的定向策略已被广泛用于谵妄的非药物管理。我们假设使用该策略可减少苏醒期躁动并改善恢复情况。
这项前瞻性、观察者盲法的随机对照试验纳入了年龄在18至70岁之间接受微创腹部手术的男性和女性患者。在全身麻醉苏醒期间,定向组(n = 57)的受试者通过降噪耳机接收到反复提醒,包括定向内容:“(患者姓名),你现在正在首尔国立大学医院做完手术后从全身麻醉中恢复,睁开眼睛!”,而对照组(n = 57)的受试者只听到他们的名字:“(患者姓名),睁开眼睛!”。主要结局是苏醒期躁动的发生率(Riker镇静躁动量表[SAS]≥5)。将危险躁动的发生率(SAS = 7)、手术室中的最大SAS评分以及术后24小时内的恢复情况作为次要结局进行评估。
定向组在手术室中的苏醒期躁动发生率显著低于对照组(16/57 [28.1%] 对38/57 [66.7%];相对风险[95%置信区间],0.5 [0.3 - 0.7];P < 0.001)。定向组的危险躁动发生率(0 [0.0%] 对10 [17.5%],P = 0.001)和最大SAS评分中位数(4 [4 - 5] 对5 [4 - 6],P < 0.001)也较低。除了与躁动相关的变量外,两组的次要结局具有可比性。
反复进行定向的口头刺激可能是一种简单且易于应用的策略,可减少全身麻醉后的苏醒期躁动。
NCT05105178。