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重症监护病房中镇静剂和镇痛药的最佳静脉给药策略。

Optimal intravenous dosing strategies for sedatives and analgesics in the intensive care unit.

作者信息

Barr J, Donner A

机构信息

Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, California, USA.

出版信息

Crit Care Clin. 1995 Oct;11(4):827-47.

PMID:8535981
Abstract

Achieving and maintaining adequate levels of analgesia and sedation in critically ill patients is a fundamental part of ICU care. Understanding the clinical pharmacology of commonly used sedative agents (e.g., midazolam, lorazepam, and propofol) and opioids (e.g., fentanyl and morphine) enables clinicians to best dose these drugs to the desired clinical effect while minimizing the risk of excessive sedation and cardiopulmonary depression. This has significant safety and cost implications for patient care in the ICU. Simulations of plasma concentrations of these medications when administered to ICU patients provide useful insight into the clinical pharmacology of these agents. A number of points should be made with regards to the interpretation of these predicted plasma concentrations, however. First, it is important to remember that PK parameters for most of these agents, with the exception of midazolam and propofol, were derived from bolus or short-term infusions administered to healthy patients, and that the PK parameters for lorazepam, fentanyl, and morphine when administered as long-term infusions to critically ill patients may vary dramatically from these initial estimates. Specifically, their volumes of distribution and elimination half-lives may prove to be significantly larger and longer, respectively, when administered to patients in the ICU. This pharmacokinetic variability may result in even longer emergence times than predicted herein following discontinuation of continuous infusions of these agents. Until similar studies in ICU patients are performed for lorazepam, fentanyl, and morphine, the clinical pharmacology of these agents in ICU patients remains uncertain. Additionally, midazolam and morphine both have active metabolites that can accumulate in critically ill patients receiving long-term infusions. These metabolites add significantly to the sedative effects of the primary compound. Other drugs with sedative effects given concurrently with any of these agents (i.e., psychotropic agents, epidural opioids, etc.) may also contribute to the sedative effects of these drugs. These studies do not account for the development of tolerance (which can occur with both benzodiazepines and opioids) or changing kinetic profiles within an individual patient over time (i.e., due to changes in volume of distribution, protein binding, or clearance). Finally, there is a high degree of interpatient variability among critically ill patients, and medication dosing must be tailored to individual patients' needs (i.e., one dose does not fit all patients). Given the uncertainty of resulting plasma concentrations with long-term administration of these medications, the best ways to achieve and maintain optimal levels of sedation and analgesia while minimizing the risk of oversedation and side effects are to (1) initiate sedation in an incremental fashion until the desired level of sedation is achieved, then periodically (i.e., once a day) titrate the infusion rate of sedative-hypnotics and opioids downward until the patient begins to emerge from the sedative effects of these drugs; and finally gradually increase the infusion rate until the desired level of sedation is once again achieved; and (2) consider the use of a sedation scale to standardize the level of sedation to be maintained (see Table 3). The use of such a scale enables physicians to communicate to nursing staff the specific level of sedation to be achieved and maintained in an individual patient (i.e., titrate the midazolam infusion between 0 to 5 mg/hr to maintain a sedation score of 2-3; call MD for inadequate sedation, respiratory depression, or hypotension). Achieving optimal sedation and analgesia of patients in the ICU requires not only that the choice of medication(s) be appropriate for the clinical setting but also that there are specific clinical endpoints for the agents used (i.e., light versus deep sedation, continuous versus intermittent sedation, sedation with

摘要

在重症患者中实现并维持足够的镇痛和镇静水平是重症监护病房(ICU)护理的基本组成部分。了解常用镇静剂(如咪达唑仑、劳拉西泮和丙泊酚)和阿片类药物(如芬太尼和吗啡)的临床药理学,能使临床医生以最佳剂量使用这些药物以达到预期临床效果,同时将过度镇静和心肺抑制的风险降至最低。这对ICU患者护理具有重大的安全和成本意义。对ICU患者使用这些药物时的血浆浓度进行模拟,有助于深入了解这些药物的临床药理学。然而,对于这些预测的血浆浓度的解读,有几点需要说明。首先,重要的是要记住,除咪达唑仑和丙泊酚外,大多数这些药物的药代动力学参数是从给予健康患者的单次推注或短期输注中得出的,而当劳拉西泮、芬太尼和吗啡作为长期输注给予重症患者时,其药代动力学参数可能与这些初始估计值有很大差异。具体而言,当给予ICU患者时,它们的分布容积和消除半衰期可能分别显著增大和延长。这种药代动力学变异性可能导致在停止连续输注这些药物后,苏醒时间比本文预测的更长。在对ICU患者进行类似的劳拉西泮、芬太尼和吗啡研究之前,这些药物在ICU患者中的临床药理学仍不确定。此外,咪达唑仑和吗啡都有活性代谢产物,在接受长期输注的重症患者中可能会蓄积。这些代谢产物会显著增强主要化合物的镇静作用。与这些药物中的任何一种同时使用的其他具有镇静作用的药物(即精神药物、硬膜外阿片类药物等)也可能会增强这些药物的镇静作用。这些研究没有考虑耐受性的发展(苯二氮䓬类药物和阿片类药物都可能发生)或个体患者随时间变化的动力学特征(即由于分布容积、蛋白结合或清除率的变化)。最后,重症患者之间存在高度的个体差异,药物剂量必须根据个体患者的需求进行调整(即一种剂量并不适用于所有患者)。鉴于长期使用这些药物时血浆浓度的不确定性,在将过度镇静和副作用风险降至最低的同时,实现并维持最佳镇静和镇痛水平的最佳方法是:(1)以递增方式开始镇静,直到达到所需的镇静水平,然后定期(即每天一次)向下调整镇静催眠药和阿片类药物的输注速率,直到患者开始从这些药物的镇静作用中苏醒;最后逐渐增加输注速率,直到再次达到所需的镇静水平;(2)考虑使用镇静评分来标准化要维持的镇静水平(见表3)。使用这样的评分系统能使医生向护理人员传达在个体患者中要达到并维持的具体镇静水平(即调整咪达唑仑输注速率在0至5毫克/小时之间,以维持镇静评分为2 - 3;若镇静不足、呼吸抑制或低血压,呼叫医生)。在ICU中实现患者的最佳镇静和镇痛,不仅要求药物选择适合临床情况,还要求所用药物有特定的临床终点(即浅镇静与深镇静、持续镇静与间断镇静、镇静与……)

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