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					Controversies in Procedural Sedation and Induction in ER February 2004 Controversies REVIEW OF ANESTHESIA GUIDELINES  IS ETOMIDATE SAFE FOR ER INDUCTION?  IS PROPOFOL SAFE IN CHILDREN?  IS KETAMINE SAFE IN HEAD INJURED PATIENTS?  ANESTHESIA GUIDELINES PRACTICE GUIDELINES FOR SEDATION AND ANALGESIA BY NONANESTHESIOLOGISTS ANESTHESIOLGY 2002  GUIDELINES FOR MONITORING AND MANAGEMENT OF PEDIATRIC PATIENTS DURING AND AFTER SEDATION –ADDENDUM PEDIATRICS 2002  ANESTHESIA GUIDELINES ASA 2002  AAP 2002  EVIDENCE BASED CONSENSUS OPINION TASK FORCE  CAEP 1999  ACEP 1998  PEDIATRIC ADDENDUM DOCUMENTED PRESEDATION MEDICAL EVALUATION  APPROPRIATE FASTING INTERVAL  SKILLED PERSONNEL  PULSE OXIMETRY  ASSIGNED MONITORING INDIVIDUAL  SPECIFIC DISCHARGE CRITERIA  ASA PRACTICE GUIDELINES DEFINTION SEDATION DEPTH  PRE PROCEDURE ASSESSMENT  PRE PROCEDURE FASTING  MONITORING / CAPNOGRAPHY  ANCILLARY STAFF  MEDICATIONS  RECOVERY CARE/DISCHARGE CRITERIA  LOCAL ANESTHESIA CONCERNS GENERAL ANESTHESIA IN ER  POOR DOCUMENTATION  PRE PROCEDURE ASSESSMENT  POST PROCEDURE RECOVERY  DISCHARGE CRITERIA  EDUCATIONAL PROCESS  DEPTH OF SEDATION Sedation Response Airway Vent CVS Moderate purpose normal normal normal Deep Repeated Possible Possible Usually painful intervene abnormal normal General anesth No Often Frequent Maybe response intervene abnormal abnormal Sedation Depth Conscious Sedation removed  Dissociative Sedation not classified  All sedatives and narcotics can produce all levels of sedation ,some are more likely to induce deep or general anesthesia  Deep and general anesthesia are more likely to be associated with adverse reactions  Sedation depth difficult to measure  PRE PROCEDURE EVALUATION Guided RiskAssessment Tool  Snoring, Stridor Sleep apnea  Airway abnormalities  Vomiting, bowel obstruction  Gastroesophageal reflux  ASA class  Sedation Failure  NPO status  HOFFMAN PEDS 02 PRE PROCEDURE FASTING REQUIREMENTS ASA GUIDELINES  Liquids 2 hours  Breast milk 4 hours  Solids 6 hours  NO SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THIS CONSENSUS OPINION  TRACHEA and ESOPHAGEAL PROCEDURES NOT ROUTINE IN ER  PRE PROCEDURAL FASTING ASPIRATION RISK  NO Published aspiration in ER> 30 years  Risk of aspiration ~1/895 emergency surgery and ~1/3500 surgery  Two thirds aspiration during intubation  Increased incidence of sedation failures with prolonged fasting times  FASTING LITERATURE  Pre procedural fasting adverse events ER Agarwal et al Annals of Emergency Medicine 2003 Pediatrics prospective case series n=905  Adverse events minor 8.1%* incidence in compliant and 6.9%* in noncompliant  Emesis 1.5%  Medications ketamine/midazolam fentanyl/midazolam  FASTING LITERATURE Median fasting duration solids 9.6 *hours vs 5.2 hours non compliant  Median fasting duration clear liquids 8.5 hours vs 4.7* hours non compliant  CONCLUSION There was no association between preprocedural fasting state and adverse events  ????? What?  Preprocedural Fasting     ACEP recent food intake is not a contraindication for administering PSA but should be considered in choosing the depth and target level of sedation CAEP Urgency of procedure and desired depth of sedation should be weighed against the risk associated with inadequate fasting ASA potential for aspiration must be considered in determining target sedation level, or whether to delay or protect by intubation ??? MONITORING Level of consciousness  Oxygenation  Hemodynamics  Ventilation* capnography  Ventilation Capnography ASA-- capnography may decrease risks during deep sedation  Capnography may decrease risks during moderate and deep sedation when patient physically separated from caregiver  Supplemental oxygen decreases patient risk during deep sedation  Capnography Measurement of endtidal CO2 infrared spectroscopy nasal cannulae  Not as accurate as in intubated patients  No evidence to suggest that it will reduce complications but may alert to subclinical respiratory depression  Respiratory depression- ETCO>50, increase >10 from baseline, absent waveforem  Capnography Literature 6 studies in ER literature  Propofol 19-48% resp depression on supplemental 02  Ketamine 6% RD no O2  Methohexital 48% RD on 02  Capnography         MAYBE* Deep sedation may require supplemental 02 Propofol sedation often deep or general Supplemental 02 may limit oximetry utility GREEN AND KRAUSS* Krauss paid consultant for capnography company Green – “Propofol not ready for prime time 1999” Green– Propofol ready for prime time 2003 – three* studies later Ancillary Staff        Trained individual other than the practitioner should be monitoring patient CRHA monitored continuously during procedure by RN with or without RT Airway Oxygenation Level of consciousness Pain General Status Ancillary Staff  CRHA - RN or LPN with or without RT monitor immediately post procedure and within 15 minutes the same parameters and vital signs Medications Combination of sedative/analgesic increase risk of complications  Efficacy of sedative alone unknown*  Propofol/methohexital use consistent with deep or general anesthesia  Etomidate not described but deep and general anesthesia common  Ketamine difficult to classify  Recovery Care Discharge Criteria       D/C when able? ASA ---monitored until they are near baseline level of consciousness and are no longer at increased risk for cardiorespiratory depression ACEP return to pre procedure baseline CAEP Airway patency, ventilation,cvs and hydration satisfactory Level of consciousness returned to baseline Sit unassisted,* tolerate oral fluids Recovery Care / Discharge Criteria Insufficient literature on topic  Based on post operative Aldrete* scoring system  Activity respiration circulation consciousness and skin color max 10  MPADSS– modified post anaesthetic score  Vital signs ambulation nausea pain bleeding  Recovery Care/Discharge Criteria “Street Fitness” or home readiness is also poorly defined  ACEP --no activity that requires coordination for 24 hours  CAEP-- no coordination activity for 12 hours, no food or drink for two hours, observe child closely for 8 hours  Medication dependent/hospital dependent  Recovery Care Literature  When is a Patient Safe for Discharge After Procedural Sedation ?Newman et al Annals of Emergency Medicine 2003 Prospective data base 2 years 1341 sedations adverse events 13.7%  Ketamine/midazolam fentanyl/midazolam  Conclusions– discharge from ED may be safe ~30 minutes after final medication  Recovery Care Literature No discharge criteria in place  Follow up patients poor 64%  Serious adverse effects occurred median 2 minutes post final med but up to 40 minutes post med  Clearly cannot generalize data  Guidelines/Anaesthesia? Preprocedure assessment  Pre procedure preparation fasting  Monitoring people equipment  Drug selection- sedation depth  Post procedure care  Is Etomidate Safe for ER Induction? Unknown  Adrenal suppression—1983 increased mortality in ICU 40% with etomidate infusion cause infection postulated to be adrenal suppression  Multiple studies confirm adrenal suppression in infusions and single doses  Clinical implication unclear  Etomidate literature Adrenocortical Dysfunction following Etomidate Induction in ER Schenarts et al Academic emergency medicine 2001 Prospective randomized controlled n=18  Etomidate vs midazolam RSI measuring cortisol response to CST testing 4-24 hours  Conclusions: etomidate in ED RSI results in adrenocortical dysfunction which appears to resolve in 12 hours  Etomidate literature Important study but serious flaws  Data collection errors methodology questionable  Reporting of data concerning  Of note: hours intubated 68.6 etomidate 28.4 midazolam ----hours in ICU 96.8 etomidate ,42 midazolam  Leaves question unanswered  Etomidate Literature NEAR study-- 60% intubations etomidate suggesting higher dose for success  Need another study to address impact of etomidate in ER on ICU outcome  Adrenal suppression increased mortality in adult ICU patients and increased vasopressor use in pediatric patients  Etomidate Literature PROCEDURAL SEDATION 6 studies 5 ER  Mainly retrospective small numbers  Myoclonus 2-20%  Vomiting 2-10%  Hypoxia 10%*  Hypotension 2-5%  Deep sedation was frequent when recorded  IS PROPOFOL SAFE in CHILDREN? Propofol infusion syndrome FDA health warning 2001*  CMAJ 2002 Wooltorton significant harm can come from off-label use of agents whose pediatric safety profile is incomplete*  Large dose propofol affects cerebral autoregulation --caution in head injured patients Anesth Analg 2003  Safety of Propofol in Pediatric Procedural Sedation 5 published ER studies*  Propofol hypoxia 5%-30%**  Hypotension 5%-30%**  Troubling Methodology  Supplemental oxygen  Blood pressure measurement skewed  Adverse events altered definition  Propofol Literature Propofol for Procedural Sedation in Children in the ER Basset et al Annals of ER 2003  Consecutive case series n=392  92% transient hypotension  5% hypoxia 3% jaw thrust 1%bvm  Conclusion: efficacious no adverse outcomes  Propofol Literature Preoxygenation 10L/min  Blood pressure change = post sedation blood pressure- minimum  ~80 patients had blood pressure drop of >20 six required iv fluids  ~80 patients dropped 02sat>5% after preoxygenation  Four member team  Propofol literature Propofol vs Ketamine in pediatric critical care Vardi et al Critical Care Medicine 2002  Prospective randomized n=105  Propofol vs Ketamine midazolam fentanyl  Propofol 2.5mg/kg vs Ketamine 2.5mg/kg/ midazolam 0.1mg/kg fentanyl 2ug/kg  SIGNIFICANT DIFFERENCE ADVERSE EFFECTS REQUIRING INTERVENTION WITH PROPOFOL  Propofol Safety Clearly there are safer drugs than propofol  Does a little hypoxia and or hypotension in a monitored setting give rise to concerns if the drug is efficacious and efficient?  Proceed with caution  Is Ketamine Safe in Head Injured Patients? MAYBE  Historically ketamine was used for neurodiagnostic sedations in hundreds of patients in 60’s and 70’s with no sequelae  1972-1974 small case series with varying doses of ketamine and variable monitoring devices variable ICP demonstrate elevation in ICP mean~increase 30 no sequelae  Ketamine Head Injury Case series during similar era, similar method and design demonstrate that intubation, inhalational anesthetics and succinylcholine lead to ~increase ICP 25 Clinical implications of brief rise in ICP in already elevated ICP was and still unclear Ketamine Head Injury       1974-2003 small prospective randomized studies done with intravenous ketamine for sedation on ventilated head injured patients No change or significant improvement in ICP No change in cerebral perfusion pressure Decrease in cerebral blood flow velocity Decrease in EEG power Maintains cerebral autoregulation Ketamine Head Injury Ketamine effects on cerebral hemodynamics poorly understood  May or may not increase regional cerebral blood flow but minimal effects on metabolism  Increases neuronal activity  May have a neuroprotective effect as a NMDA antagonist  S+isomer may have less cerebral effects  Ketamine Head Injury Maybe  It is all about Numbers and not Outcome  Are transient decreases in MAP and CPP with thiopentothal or midazolam worse or better than transient increases in MAP and ICP with ketamine?  Who Cares? Patient profile  Controversies Sedation and Induction in ER Multiple medication options  Significant potential adverse effects with most meds but few significant complications  Literature relatively weak in design and numbers with multiple manipulations of data  Significant pharmaceutical money at stake  Controversies      Safety is paramount*-- enhance with drug knowledge, preprocedure assessment, monitoring and discharge criteria Efficacy is important but sedation depth is poorly defined and measured Efficiency is important but cannot preclude safety and efficacy Medicolegal concerns necessitate improved documentation Ideal Drug? Controversies ??????
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            