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Project: Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative
Document Title: “Taming the Wild Child” - Pearls, Pitfalls and Controversies
in Pediatric Analgesia and Sedation, 2013
Author(s): Jeff Holmes MD, Maine Medical Center
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“Taming the Wild Child”
Pearls, Pitfalls and Controversies in
Pediatric Analgesia and Sedation
3
JEFF HOLMES, MD
DIRECTOR OF SIMULATION EDUCATION
ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE
MAINE MEDICAL CENTER
Outline
4

—  Myths and Truths
—  Pediatric sedation principles
—  Reinforce non-PSA options
—  Case Presentations
—  Current controversies, updates
Myths
5

—  Myth – Kids don’t feel pain
- “Pediatric patients seldom need medication for relief of pain. They
tolerate discomfort well...”

—  Kids can’t use pain scales
—  Assessment of pain can be difficult in a nonverbal

child
Myths
6

—  Young children have no memory of pain
—  Worry about addiction
—  Fear of side effects
Truth
7

— Kids less than 2 years get less pain

medications than older patients
— Toddlers view pain as punishment
— JCAHO mandates
Children – Not just Small Adults?
8

—  More likely to have airway obstruction

during sedation due to a relatively larger
tongue, epiglottis and occiput.
—  Children desaturate more quickly after apnea than
even moderately ill adults
—  Children require more frequent sedation dosing and
their sedation level is more difficult to assess.
Children – Not Just Small Adults?
9

—  It is essential that drug dosages be calculated based

on a precise weight measurement, not a parent’s
estimate.
—  Resuscitation equipment must be size and age
appropriate.
Procedural Sedation – Monitoring/Equipment
10

—  Pulse oximetry
—  Heart rate monitoring
—  Blood pressure before, after medication

administration, during recovery
¡ 

Every 5 minutes during deep sedation

—  Age appropriate resuscitation equipment and

supplies
—  Capnography
Capnography
11

—  Detects hypoventilation prior to

desaturation
¡  Particularly

if using supplemental oxygen
¡  Children stimulated after 15 sec of
hypoventilaton significantly less likely to
desaturate vs. 60 sec of hypoventilation
—  More sensitive than clinical assessment
÷  Burton

et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2006 May;13(5):500-4.
Procedural Sedation - Capnography
12

—  Study of patients undergoing endoscopy
¡  Hypoventilation in 56% of procedures and apnea
during 24%
¡  Staff watching identified hypoventilation in 3%
and no apnea
•  Lightdale. Pediatrics. 2006 Jun;117(6):e1170-8.
ETCO2 Normal Capnogram
13

Source undetermined
ETCO2 and Apnea
14

—  Flatline on capnogram monitor, no chest movement

Source undetermined
ETCO2 and Laryngospasm
15

—  Flatline on capnogram monitor, chest movement in

attempt to breath

Source undetermined
Case
16

—  3 week old requires evaluation with lumbar

puncture for fever and lethargy. Vitals are
normal except for fever and tachycardia.
What are you going to sedate the child with
for the lumbar puncture?
Non-PSA Options for Neonates
17

—  Oral sucrose
—  Release of endogenous

opiates as a result of
sweet taste
—  Safe and effective
—  Studied in heel stick,
venipuncture, lumbar
puncture
÷  Stevens

B. et al. Cochrane
Database Syst Rev 2004;
(3):CD001069
Respironics, sweetease.respironics.eu
Non-PSA Options for Children
18

—  Topical anesthesia
¡  XAP, LET, TAC
¡  Get it started early (ie. From triage)
¡  Have parent/caregiver “paint” it on

Epinephrine 0.05 %
Lidocaine 4 %
Tetracaine HCl 0.5 %

Arneb, Wikimedia Commons
Non-PSA Options for Children
19

—  Protective restraint
¡ Papoosing
¡ Best

applicable
for preverbal child
¡ Risk/benefit
discussion
Quickmedical.com
EMLA or ELA-max
20

Drugs.com

30 min to achieve peak effect
Drugs.com

1 hour to achieve peak effect

HMP Communications, invasivecardiology.com
Behavioral Techniques
21

—  Gain the child’s trust
—  Child life resources
—  Distraction
—  Parental presence, and parental

preparation
—  Age appropriate language
—  Provide a positive environment for the child
undergoing a painful procedure.
Injected Lidocaine - Tips
22

—  For wounds that require precise anatomic alignment,

regional block preferable to infiltration
—  No evidence that lido with epi on face, nose, ear digit
or penis has ischemic complications
—  Buffering with NaHCO3 decreases pain of injection
(1 part of 1 mEq/ml to 9 parts lidocaine)

Churchill Livingstone, web.squ.edu.om
Buffering Lidocaine
23

Clinbiochem.info

1 Parts

JL Johnson, Wikimedia Commons

9 Parts
Atomized Fentanyl/Versed
Fentanyl (50 mcg/ml)
—  1 – 2 mcg/kg
—  (max of 100 mcg)  
—  Repeat ½ to full dose
q10 – 15 min as needed for
pain

24

Midazolam (5mg/ml)
—  0.2 – 0. 5 mg/kg
—  (max of 10 mg)
—  Repeat ½ to full dose in
10 – 15 min if needed to achieve
goal sedation

LMA North America, emsworld.com
Case Study
25

—  20 month old, fall into a coffee table. While waiting

in the waiting room, mom gave the child a bag of
potato chips and some apple juice. How long should
we wait for procedural sedation?
Procedural Sedation – Fasting
26

—  Fasting
¡  ASA guidelines - consensus based
÷ Two hours for clear liquids
÷ Four hours for breast milk
÷ Six hours for formula, non-human milk, and solids
•  Practice guidelines for preoperative fasting and the use of
pharmacologic agents to reduce the risk of pulmonary
aspiration: application to healthy patients undergoing elective
procedures: a report by the American Society of
Anesthesiologist Task Force on Preoperative Fasting.
Anesthesiology 1999; 90:896.
Procedural Sedation and Fasting
27

—  Fasting – ED studies
—  2 large prospective studies involving ketamine,

ketamine/versed, fentanyl/versed
—  No difference in complications between those that
met fasting guidelines and those that did not
•  Agrawal D. et al. Ann Emerg Med 2003 Nov;42(5):636-46.
•  Roback MG. et al. J. Ann Emerg Med 2004 Nov;44(5):454-9.
—  1. Should Pediatric patients undergo a period of

preprocedural fasting to decrease the incidence of
clinically important complications in the ED?
—  Level B recommendation: Procedural sedation may

be safely administered to pediatric patients in the
ED who have had recent oral intake.

28
Procedural Sedation and Fasting
29

—  “Empty mouths, not empty stomachs”
—  Insufficient evidence to support the position

that fasting guidelines crafted for operative
anesthesia should be extrapolated to
sedation practice
Fasting and Risk Stratification
30

—  Assess the patient’s Risk
—  Asses the timing and nature of recent oral intake
—  Assess the urgency of the procedure
—  Determine the prudent limit of targeted depth and

length of procedural sedation and analgesia
31

Seth Rossman, Wikimedia Commons
Case
32

—  5 yo female was playing on the monkey bars who fell

and suffered a both bone forearm fracture requiring
reduction.
—  Mom asks what you will use for sedation because last
time she was got ketamine she woke up hysterical
and screaming… then threw up.
Ketamine Controversies
33

—  Is adjuvant medication (versed or atropine) needed?
—  Is there an advantage to IM versus IV

administration?
—  What about ketamine and propofol (ketofol)?
Ketamine and Midazolam
34

—  Traditionally given to reduce “emergence”

reactions
—  Emergence reactions rare
—  Adjunctive administration added no benefit in
preventing emergence rare
÷  Wathen

J. Et al. Ann Emerg Med 2000 Dec;36(6):579-88.
÷  Sherwin TS. Et al. Ann Emerg Med. Mar 2000; 25(3): 229-238.
Ketamine and Midazolam
35

—  Why not give it?
—  Midazolam increases incidence of oxygen

desaturation
¡  7.3

versus 1.6 percent

—  Effects were more pronounced in children younger

than 10 years of age
÷  Sherwin

et al. Ann Emerg Med. Mar 2000; 35 (3); 229 – 238.
÷  Wathen JE. Ann Emerg Med 2000 Dec;36(6):579-88.
Ketamine and Atropine
36

—  Ketamine causes increased salivation
—  Atropine or glycopyrolate given with ketamine

reduces salivation
—  As long as dosed to avoid paradoxical bradycardia
(doses less than 0.1 mg) relatively harmless
—  Data suggests no benefit
•  Brown L et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2008 Apr;15(4):314-8.
•  Heinz P. et al. Emerg Med J. 2006 Mar;23(3):206-9.
•  Green SM. Acad Emerg Med. 2010 Feb; 17 (2): 157-162.
Ketamine – Emergence Reactions
37

—  Diminished emergence reactions by decreasing the amount of

environmental stimuli
¡  Green SM et al. Ann Emerg Med. Sep 1990; 19 (9); 1033-1046.
¡  Kumar A. et al. Anesthesia. 1992; 47 (5): 438-439.
—  “Suggestive dreaming”
¡  Sklar GS et al. Anesthesia. 1981; 26 (2): 183-187.
IM versus IV Ketamine
38

—  Observational study of 4252 children

receiving IV or IM ketamine
¡  20

of 29 cases of laryngospasm occurred in the
IM group
¡  Overall rate of laryngospasm 7 per 1000
sedations
•  Melendez E. Pediatr Emerg Care 2009; 25:325.
IM versus IV Ketamine
39

—  IM injection had significantly longer recovery

times
¡  129 versus 80 minutes in the IV ketamine group
—  More vomiting
¡  26% versus 12% in the IV ketamine group
•  Roback MG; Wathen JE; MacKenzie T; Bajaj L. Ann Emerg Med.
2006 Nov;48(5):605-12.
IM versus IV Ketamine Summary
40

—  Possibly higher adverse respiratory events with IM
—  Higher rates of emesis with IM
—  Longer recovery period with IM ketamine

— When possible, use IV Ketamine
Case
41

—  10 year old presents

with a displaced distal
radius fracture with
significant apex dorsal
angulation requiring
reduction. The nurse
asks if you want to try
the new sedation
technique she heard
about using both
propofol and ketamine.

Source undetermined
Ketofol
42

—  Using sub-dissociative doses of ketamine (0.5 mg/

kg IV) and propofol (1mg/kg)
—  Improved airway preservation, decreased vomiting,
and decreased need for opioid use when applicable.
—  Fewer boluses to maintain sedation
—  Higher patient and physician satisfaction scores

Schlonz, Wikimedia Commons

JohnOyston, Wikimedia Commons
Ketofol
43

Adverse Events Ketamine

Propofol

Ketofol

Airway Events

Infrequent

Frequent

Infrequent

Heart Rate

Tachycardia

Tachycardia/
Bradycardia

Normocardia

Blood Pressure

Hypertension

Hypotension

Normotension

Emesis

Frequent

Infrequent

Infrequent

Emergence

Frequent

Infrequent

Infrequent
Shah et al. - Methodology
44

—  Canadian study: Ketamine vs Ketofol
—  Double, Randomized controlled trial
—  2-17 yo (orthopedic procedures only)
—  136 patients
—  Ketamine (0.5 mg/kg IV) + Propfol (1 mg/kg)
—  Ketamine (1 mg/kg IV)
¡ 

Shah et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011; 57: 425-433.
Shah et al. - Results
45

—  There was less vomiting in the ketamine/propofol

(2%) group compared with the ketamine (12%) group
—  Ketofol has slightly faster recovery times (13 min)
compared to propofol (16 minutes)
—  Similar efficacy and airway complications
—  All satisfaction scores were higher with ketamine
¡ 

Shah et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011; 57: 425-433.
Ketofol (1 ketamine: 1 propofol)
46

—  Draw up 10ml of Propofol in a 20cc syringe.
¡  Propofol comes 10mg/ml.
—  Discard 2cc from a 10cc saline flush. Drawl up 2cc of

Ketamine.
Ketamine 50mg/ml (adjust the dose if you use a different
concentration)
¡  You now have 10mg/ml
¡ 

—  Inject the Ketamine in the saline flush into a 20cc

syringe of Propofol.
—  Dose at 0.5 mg/kg IV Ketofol, then redose as needed
Case Study
47

—  3 yo male falls off the bed hitting his head and eye.

Positive LOC describe by the older brother (who
pushed him). Vomitted x 3 in the ED. Slightly
somnolent, but becomes agitated with exam.
Sedation Options
48

—  Versed
—  Ketamine
—  Pentobarbital
—  Propofol
Pentobarbital
49

—  Best effects IV
—  Can be given IM, PO, Rectal
—  Dose 1-6 mg/kg given in 2 mg/kg aliquots
—  Many centers is the sedative of choice for

diagnostic imaging
—  Better than midazolam or chloral hydrate
÷  Pereira

JK. Pediatr Radiol 1993; 23:341-44.
Pentobarbital Pros and Cons
50

—  Pros
¡ Quick

onset (3-5
minutes)
¡ Lasts 30-40
minutes
¡ Cerebroprotective

—  Cons
¡  Burns

on infusion
unless diluted
¡  Can cause
respiratory
depression and
hypotension
¡  Avoid with
porphyria
Pentobarbital - Controversies
51

— Safe, effective sedation
— Standard for diagnostic imaging if

propofol not available
— Never been compared directly to
propofol
Questions?
52
Summary Slide
53

—  In pediatric sedation, children are not just small

adults
—  Capnography is becoming the standard of care for
procedural sedation
—  Topical anesthetics and distraction can get you a
long way
Summary
54

—  Adjunct medications not needed for Ketamine
—  IV Ketamine has less side effects than IM Ketamine
—  Keep an eye out for Ketofol to gain popularity
—  Pentobarbital probably most reliable method of

sedation for imaging

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Pediatric Analgesia and Sedation Pearls

  • 1. Project: Ghana Emergency Medicine Collaborative Document Title: “Taming the Wild Child” - Pearls, Pitfalls and Controversies in Pediatric Analgesia and Sedation, 2013 Author(s): Jeff Holmes MD, Maine Medical Center License: Unless otherwise noted, this material is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike-3.0 License: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ We have reviewed this material in accordance with U.S. Copyright Law and have tried to maximize your ability to use, share, and adapt it. These lectures have been modified in the process of making a publicly shareable version. The citation key on the following slide provides information about how you may share and adapt this material. Copyright holders of content included in this material should contact open.michigan@umich.edu with any questions, corrections, or clarification regarding the use of content. For more information about how to cite these materials visit http://open.umich.edu/privacy-and-terms-use. Any medical information in this material is intended to inform and educate and is not a tool for self-diagnosis or a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional. Please speak to your physician if you have questions about your medical condition. Viewer discretion is advised: Some medical content is graphic and may not be suitable for all viewers.
  • 2. Attribution Key for more information see: http://open.umich.edu/wiki/AttributionPolicy Use + Share + Adapt { Content the copyright holder, author, or law permits you to use, share and adapt. } Public Domain – Government: Works that are produced by the U.S. Government. (17 USC § 105) Public Domain – Expired: Works that are no longer protected due to an expired copyright term. Public Domain – Self Dedicated: Works that a copyright holder has dedicated to the public domain. Creative Commons – Zero Waiver Creative Commons – Attribution License Creative Commons – Attribution Share Alike License Creative Commons – Attribution Noncommercial License Creative Commons – Attribution Noncommercial Share Alike License GNU – Free Documentation License Make Your Own Assessment { Content Open.Michigan believes can be used, shared, and adapted because it is ineligible for copyright. } Public Domain – Ineligible: Works that are ineligible for copyright protection in the U.S. (17 USC § 102(b)) *laws in your jurisdiction may differ { Content Open.Michigan has used under a Fair Use determination. } Fair Use: Use of works that is determined to be Fair consistent with the U.S. Copyright Act. (17 USC § 107) *laws in your jurisdiction may differ Our determination DOES NOT mean that all uses of this 3rd-party content are Fair Uses and we DO NOT guarantee that your use of the content is Fair. To use this content you should do your own independent analysis to determine whether or not your use will be Fair.
  • 3. “Taming the Wild Child” Pearls, Pitfalls and Controversies in Pediatric Analgesia and Sedation 3 JEFF HOLMES, MD DIRECTOR OF SIMULATION EDUCATION ASSISTANT PROFESSOR OF EMERGENCY MEDICINE MAINE MEDICAL CENTER
  • 4. Outline 4 —  Myths and Truths —  Pediatric sedation principles —  Reinforce non-PSA options —  Case Presentations —  Current controversies, updates
  • 5. Myths 5 —  Myth – Kids don’t feel pain - “Pediatric patients seldom need medication for relief of pain. They tolerate discomfort well...” —  Kids can’t use pain scales —  Assessment of pain can be difficult in a nonverbal child
  • 6. Myths 6 —  Young children have no memory of pain —  Worry about addiction —  Fear of side effects
  • 7. Truth 7 — Kids less than 2 years get less pain medications than older patients — Toddlers view pain as punishment — JCAHO mandates
  • 8. Children – Not just Small Adults? 8 —  More likely to have airway obstruction during sedation due to a relatively larger tongue, epiglottis and occiput. —  Children desaturate more quickly after apnea than even moderately ill adults —  Children require more frequent sedation dosing and their sedation level is more difficult to assess.
  • 9. Children – Not Just Small Adults? 9 —  It is essential that drug dosages be calculated based on a precise weight measurement, not a parent’s estimate. —  Resuscitation equipment must be size and age appropriate.
  • 10. Procedural Sedation – Monitoring/Equipment 10 —  Pulse oximetry —  Heart rate monitoring —  Blood pressure before, after medication administration, during recovery ¡  Every 5 minutes during deep sedation —  Age appropriate resuscitation equipment and supplies —  Capnography
  • 11. Capnography 11 —  Detects hypoventilation prior to desaturation ¡  Particularly if using supplemental oxygen ¡  Children stimulated after 15 sec of hypoventilaton significantly less likely to desaturate vs. 60 sec of hypoventilation —  More sensitive than clinical assessment ÷  Burton et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2006 May;13(5):500-4.
  • 12. Procedural Sedation - Capnography 12 —  Study of patients undergoing endoscopy ¡  Hypoventilation in 56% of procedures and apnea during 24% ¡  Staff watching identified hypoventilation in 3% and no apnea •  Lightdale. Pediatrics. 2006 Jun;117(6):e1170-8.
  • 14. ETCO2 and Apnea 14 —  Flatline on capnogram monitor, no chest movement Source undetermined
  • 15. ETCO2 and Laryngospasm 15 —  Flatline on capnogram monitor, chest movement in attempt to breath Source undetermined
  • 16. Case 16 —  3 week old requires evaluation with lumbar puncture for fever and lethargy. Vitals are normal except for fever and tachycardia. What are you going to sedate the child with for the lumbar puncture?
  • 17. Non-PSA Options for Neonates 17 —  Oral sucrose —  Release of endogenous opiates as a result of sweet taste —  Safe and effective —  Studied in heel stick, venipuncture, lumbar puncture ÷  Stevens B. et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2004; (3):CD001069 Respironics, sweetease.respironics.eu
  • 18. Non-PSA Options for Children 18 —  Topical anesthesia ¡  XAP, LET, TAC ¡  Get it started early (ie. From triage) ¡  Have parent/caregiver “paint” it on Epinephrine 0.05 % Lidocaine 4 % Tetracaine HCl 0.5 % Arneb, Wikimedia Commons
  • 19. Non-PSA Options for Children 19 —  Protective restraint ¡ Papoosing ¡ Best applicable for preverbal child ¡ Risk/benefit discussion Quickmedical.com
  • 20. EMLA or ELA-max 20 Drugs.com 30 min to achieve peak effect Drugs.com 1 hour to achieve peak effect HMP Communications, invasivecardiology.com
  • 21. Behavioral Techniques 21 —  Gain the child’s trust —  Child life resources —  Distraction —  Parental presence, and parental preparation —  Age appropriate language —  Provide a positive environment for the child undergoing a painful procedure.
  • 22. Injected Lidocaine - Tips 22 —  For wounds that require precise anatomic alignment, regional block preferable to infiltration —  No evidence that lido with epi on face, nose, ear digit or penis has ischemic complications —  Buffering with NaHCO3 decreases pain of injection (1 part of 1 mEq/ml to 9 parts lidocaine) Churchill Livingstone, web.squ.edu.om
  • 23. Buffering Lidocaine 23 Clinbiochem.info 1 Parts JL Johnson, Wikimedia Commons 9 Parts
  • 24. Atomized Fentanyl/Versed Fentanyl (50 mcg/ml) —  1 – 2 mcg/kg —  (max of 100 mcg)   —  Repeat ½ to full dose q10 – 15 min as needed for pain 24 Midazolam (5mg/ml) —  0.2 – 0. 5 mg/kg —  (max of 10 mg) —  Repeat ½ to full dose in 10 – 15 min if needed to achieve goal sedation LMA North America, emsworld.com
  • 25. Case Study 25 —  20 month old, fall into a coffee table. While waiting in the waiting room, mom gave the child a bag of potato chips and some apple juice. How long should we wait for procedural sedation?
  • 26. Procedural Sedation – Fasting 26 —  Fasting ¡  ASA guidelines - consensus based ÷ Two hours for clear liquids ÷ Four hours for breast milk ÷ Six hours for formula, non-human milk, and solids •  Practice guidelines for preoperative fasting and the use of pharmacologic agents to reduce the risk of pulmonary aspiration: application to healthy patients undergoing elective procedures: a report by the American Society of Anesthesiologist Task Force on Preoperative Fasting. Anesthesiology 1999; 90:896.
  • 27. Procedural Sedation and Fasting 27 —  Fasting – ED studies —  2 large prospective studies involving ketamine, ketamine/versed, fentanyl/versed —  No difference in complications between those that met fasting guidelines and those that did not •  Agrawal D. et al. Ann Emerg Med 2003 Nov;42(5):636-46. •  Roback MG. et al. J. Ann Emerg Med 2004 Nov;44(5):454-9.
  • 28. —  1. Should Pediatric patients undergo a period of preprocedural fasting to decrease the incidence of clinically important complications in the ED? —  Level B recommendation: Procedural sedation may be safely administered to pediatric patients in the ED who have had recent oral intake. 28
  • 29. Procedural Sedation and Fasting 29 —  “Empty mouths, not empty stomachs” —  Insufficient evidence to support the position that fasting guidelines crafted for operative anesthesia should be extrapolated to sedation practice
  • 30. Fasting and Risk Stratification 30 —  Assess the patient’s Risk —  Asses the timing and nature of recent oral intake —  Assess the urgency of the procedure —  Determine the prudent limit of targeted depth and length of procedural sedation and analgesia
  • 32. Case 32 —  5 yo female was playing on the monkey bars who fell and suffered a both bone forearm fracture requiring reduction. —  Mom asks what you will use for sedation because last time she was got ketamine she woke up hysterical and screaming… then threw up.
  • 33. Ketamine Controversies 33 —  Is adjuvant medication (versed or atropine) needed? —  Is there an advantage to IM versus IV administration? —  What about ketamine and propofol (ketofol)?
  • 34. Ketamine and Midazolam 34 —  Traditionally given to reduce “emergence” reactions —  Emergence reactions rare —  Adjunctive administration added no benefit in preventing emergence rare ÷  Wathen J. Et al. Ann Emerg Med 2000 Dec;36(6):579-88. ÷  Sherwin TS. Et al. Ann Emerg Med. Mar 2000; 25(3): 229-238.
  • 35. Ketamine and Midazolam 35 —  Why not give it? —  Midazolam increases incidence of oxygen desaturation ¡  7.3 versus 1.6 percent —  Effects were more pronounced in children younger than 10 years of age ÷  Sherwin et al. Ann Emerg Med. Mar 2000; 35 (3); 229 – 238. ÷  Wathen JE. Ann Emerg Med 2000 Dec;36(6):579-88.
  • 36. Ketamine and Atropine 36 —  Ketamine causes increased salivation —  Atropine or glycopyrolate given with ketamine reduces salivation —  As long as dosed to avoid paradoxical bradycardia (doses less than 0.1 mg) relatively harmless —  Data suggests no benefit •  Brown L et al. Acad Emerg Med. 2008 Apr;15(4):314-8. •  Heinz P. et al. Emerg Med J. 2006 Mar;23(3):206-9. •  Green SM. Acad Emerg Med. 2010 Feb; 17 (2): 157-162.
  • 37. Ketamine – Emergence Reactions 37 —  Diminished emergence reactions by decreasing the amount of environmental stimuli ¡  Green SM et al. Ann Emerg Med. Sep 1990; 19 (9); 1033-1046. ¡  Kumar A. et al. Anesthesia. 1992; 47 (5): 438-439. —  “Suggestive dreaming” ¡  Sklar GS et al. Anesthesia. 1981; 26 (2): 183-187.
  • 38. IM versus IV Ketamine 38 —  Observational study of 4252 children receiving IV or IM ketamine ¡  20 of 29 cases of laryngospasm occurred in the IM group ¡  Overall rate of laryngospasm 7 per 1000 sedations •  Melendez E. Pediatr Emerg Care 2009; 25:325.
  • 39. IM versus IV Ketamine 39 —  IM injection had significantly longer recovery times ¡  129 versus 80 minutes in the IV ketamine group —  More vomiting ¡  26% versus 12% in the IV ketamine group •  Roback MG; Wathen JE; MacKenzie T; Bajaj L. Ann Emerg Med. 2006 Nov;48(5):605-12.
  • 40. IM versus IV Ketamine Summary 40 —  Possibly higher adverse respiratory events with IM —  Higher rates of emesis with IM —  Longer recovery period with IM ketamine — When possible, use IV Ketamine
  • 41. Case 41 —  10 year old presents with a displaced distal radius fracture with significant apex dorsal angulation requiring reduction. The nurse asks if you want to try the new sedation technique she heard about using both propofol and ketamine. Source undetermined
  • 42. Ketofol 42 —  Using sub-dissociative doses of ketamine (0.5 mg/ kg IV) and propofol (1mg/kg) —  Improved airway preservation, decreased vomiting, and decreased need for opioid use when applicable. —  Fewer boluses to maintain sedation —  Higher patient and physician satisfaction scores Schlonz, Wikimedia Commons JohnOyston, Wikimedia Commons
  • 43. Ketofol 43 Adverse Events Ketamine Propofol Ketofol Airway Events Infrequent Frequent Infrequent Heart Rate Tachycardia Tachycardia/ Bradycardia Normocardia Blood Pressure Hypertension Hypotension Normotension Emesis Frequent Infrequent Infrequent Emergence Frequent Infrequent Infrequent
  • 44. Shah et al. - Methodology 44 —  Canadian study: Ketamine vs Ketofol —  Double, Randomized controlled trial —  2-17 yo (orthopedic procedures only) —  136 patients —  Ketamine (0.5 mg/kg IV) + Propfol (1 mg/kg) —  Ketamine (1 mg/kg IV) ¡  Shah et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011; 57: 425-433.
  • 45. Shah et al. - Results 45 —  There was less vomiting in the ketamine/propofol (2%) group compared with the ketamine (12%) group —  Ketofol has slightly faster recovery times (13 min) compared to propofol (16 minutes) —  Similar efficacy and airway complications —  All satisfaction scores were higher with ketamine ¡  Shah et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2011; 57: 425-433.
  • 46. Ketofol (1 ketamine: 1 propofol) 46 —  Draw up 10ml of Propofol in a 20cc syringe. ¡  Propofol comes 10mg/ml. —  Discard 2cc from a 10cc saline flush. Drawl up 2cc of Ketamine. Ketamine 50mg/ml (adjust the dose if you use a different concentration) ¡  You now have 10mg/ml ¡  —  Inject the Ketamine in the saline flush into a 20cc syringe of Propofol. —  Dose at 0.5 mg/kg IV Ketofol, then redose as needed
  • 47. Case Study 47 —  3 yo male falls off the bed hitting his head and eye. Positive LOC describe by the older brother (who pushed him). Vomitted x 3 in the ED. Slightly somnolent, but becomes agitated with exam.
  • 48. Sedation Options 48 —  Versed —  Ketamine —  Pentobarbital —  Propofol
  • 49. Pentobarbital 49 —  Best effects IV —  Can be given IM, PO, Rectal —  Dose 1-6 mg/kg given in 2 mg/kg aliquots —  Many centers is the sedative of choice for diagnostic imaging —  Better than midazolam or chloral hydrate ÷  Pereira JK. Pediatr Radiol 1993; 23:341-44.
  • 50. Pentobarbital Pros and Cons 50 —  Pros ¡ Quick onset (3-5 minutes) ¡ Lasts 30-40 minutes ¡ Cerebroprotective —  Cons ¡  Burns on infusion unless diluted ¡  Can cause respiratory depression and hypotension ¡  Avoid with porphyria
  • 51. Pentobarbital - Controversies 51 — Safe, effective sedation — Standard for diagnostic imaging if propofol not available — Never been compared directly to propofol
  • 53. Summary Slide 53 —  In pediatric sedation, children are not just small adults —  Capnography is becoming the standard of care for procedural sedation —  Topical anesthetics and distraction can get you a long way
  • 54. Summary 54 —  Adjunct medications not needed for Ketamine —  IV Ketamine has less side effects than IM Ketamine —  Keep an eye out for Ketofol to gain popularity —  Pentobarbital probably most reliable method of sedation for imaging