Procedural Sedation Pharmacology Deb Updegraff R.N., P.N.P, C.N.S. Clinical Nurse Specialist LPCH Pediatric Intensive Care Unit.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Moderate Sedation Review 2008
Advertisements

Veterinary Anesthesia Severna Park Veterinary Hospital Aug. 6, 2014 Rebecca Krimins, DVM, MS Advanced Anesthesia and Pain Management for Animals.
Procedural Sedation Changes Go live: APRIL 24th. Why These Changes? Per the Cal Dept of Public Health (ie, the “state”) and CMS (federal) nurses cannot.
Alyssa Brzenski. Case You are called by a parent of a child who you took care of a week and a half ago. The child, a 4 year old boy, came to IR for the.
Seizures: Nuts and Bolts National Pediatric Nighttime Curriculum Written by Anna Lin, MD Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital.
Epilepsy 2 Dr. Hawar A. Mykhan.
Narcotic agonist/narcotic analgesic. Mechanism of Action: Alleviates pain by acting on the pain receptors in the brain; elevates pain threshold. Depresses.
Rapid Sequence Intubation In the Emergency Department.
Analgesia & Conscious Sedation Narges Daliri, M.D., FAAP Consultant, Pediatric Emergency KFSH & RC, Riyadh.
Sedation & Analgesia PICU Resident Talk Stanford School of Medicine Pediatric Critical Care Medicine June 2010.
Ketamine for Induction Use in the Prehospital Setting.
Conscious Sedation Standards for Sedation ADM III 4.0
Local & General Anesthetics Ch 11. General Anesthesia Alters responses of the Central Nervous system Causes one or more of the following Pain relief Muscle.
1 Pediatric Sedation Desi Reddy ( MB ChB, FFA, FRCPC ) Department of Anesthesia McMaster University.
Seizures: Nuts and Bolts Nightfloat Curriculum Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Residency Program.
Fentanyl. Fentanyl Basics  First synthesized in Belgium in the 1950’s for anesthesia  Trade Name “Sublimaze”  It is a potent synthetic narcotic with.
Midazolam Use in the Emergency Department
Procedural Sedation: Deb Updegraff, R.N., M.S.N. P.N.P. Clinical Nurse Specialist Pediatric Intensive Care 3S Intermediate Intensive Care LPCH.
Pain Management and Sedation Nightfloat Curriculum LPCH Pediatric Residency Program.
Oral Sedation.
Sedation and Analgesia for Diagnostic and Therapeutic Procedures Michael S. Mazurek, M.D. Associate Professor of Clinical Anesthesia Riley Hospital for.
Is One Anesthetic Technique Associated with Faster Recovery? Trey Bates, MD “Time Equals Money” Or.
Mosby items and derived items © 2007 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 12 General Anesthetics.
. Moderate Sedation Review 2009 Part 2: Pharmacology.
Procedural Sedation: Pediatric Considerations Deb Civello, RN, CPEN, CCRN Connecticut Children’s Medical Center March 24, 2009.
Intravenous anesthetic agents. Intravenous Anesthetics BarbituratesBenzodiazepinesOpioids Miscellaneous drugs.
Managing and Detecting Seizures in the ICU Special thanks to: Katherine Nickels, MD Assistant Professor of Neurology and Pediatrics Mayo Clinic.
Conscious Sedation. Sedation and Analgesia O “ A state that allows patients to tolerate unpleasant procedures while maintaining adequate cardiorespiratory.
CNS depressants CNS depressants
Pediatric Sedation and Analgesia Jan Bazner-Chandler RN,MSN, CNS, CPNP.
Pediatric Procedural Sedation
Sedation, Pain, and Analgesia
Pharmacology of general anesthetics
Narcotic Analgesic Medications Narcotic Analgesics.
Kalpesh N. Patel, MD Dept. of Pediatric Emergency Medicine August 1, 2007 Sedation and Analgesia for ED101.
Prepared by : Areen Zraikah Dana Fatayer. Pharmacology: Naloxone and nalmefene are pure opioid antagonists that competitively block mu, kappa, and delta.
Sedation, Analgesia and Paralytics in the ICU
Drugs to Assist in Intubation Sara Park
Sedation in the GI Suite Curt Mardis, MD Staff Anesthesiologist St Mary’s Medical Center Evansville, Indiana.
Sedatives & Hypnotics. Sedatives The perfect sedative reduces anxiety with little or no effect on motor or mental function within the therapeutic dosing.
General Anesthesia Dr. Israa.
Procedural Sedation for Adult Patients. By relieving anxiety, reducing pain, and providing amnesia, sedation techniques have the potential to render potentially.
By: Dr. safa bakr M.B.Ch.B. ,H.D.A. ,F.I.B.M S.
Narcotic Analgesics and Anesthesia Drugs Narcotic Analgesics.
2009 Pandemic Education Package Pharmacology Review.
Intravenous anesthetics. Toxicity of General Anesthesia.
PRE-OPERATIVE PRE - MEDICATION. Pre-medication  Pre-medication is the administration of drugs before anesthesia.  Pre-medication is used to prepare.
Procedural Sedation Devin Herbert Jan 24/13. Thank you’s Drs. Simon Bartley Rob Lafreniere Rick Morris Matt Erskine Jamie McLellan.
CNS Depressants Lab # 2.
Narcotic agonist/narcotic analgesic. Mechanism of Action: Alleviates pain by acting on the pain receptors in the brain; elevates pain threshold. Depresses.
Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.
Pediatric Sedation and Analgesia Jan Chandler RN,MSN, CNS, CPNP.
Welcome! Webinar participants Please be sure your mic is on mute You can send messages in the chat pane Mute Cellphones 1.
Ondansetron Tactical Combat Casualty Care Guideline Change Dec 14.
Premedication Management of anesthesia begins with preoperative psychological preparation of the patient and administration of a drug or drugs selected.
Inhaled anesthetics By: Israa Omar.
PEDIATRIC ANESTHETIC CONSIDERATIONS. KIDS ARE NOT SMALL ADULTS.
F1 이운주.  May be defined as a drug-induced depression  Purpose to relieve patient anxiety and discomfort to improve the outcome of the examination to.
Anesthesia Part 3 By Alaina Darby.
Lectures in Veterinary Anesthesia
MD., DA., DNB, MD (Acu), Dip. Diab. DCA, Dip. Software statistics,
General Anesthesia.
General Anesthesia.
Sedation and Anagesia in Critical Care
CNS Depressants Lab # 2.
Dr: Marah By: Abd. Salman
NON VOLATILE ANESTHETIC AGENTS( Intravenous Anesthetics)
PROPOFOL.
Sedation and Analgesia in Acutely Ill Children
Presentation transcript:

Procedural Sedation Pharmacology Deb Updegraff R.N., P.N.P, C.N.S. Clinical Nurse Specialist LPCH Pediatric Intensive Care Unit

Procedural Sedation The phrase “procedural sedation” refers to techniques of managing a patient’s pain and anxiety to facilitate appropriate medical care in a safe, effective and humane fashion.

Age Concurrent disease states Concurrent drug therapy Sedation Pharmacolgy Individual responses are dependant on:

Chloral Hydrate Hypnotic- “Short term sedative and hypnotic given prior to nonpainful procedures

Chloral Hydrate Usually given to Outpatients due to relative low risk profile. For non- painful procedures only. EEGs MRI/CT Scans Echocardiograms

Chloral Hydrate PO/Rectal Dose: 50mg/kg give minutes prior to procedure. Can repeat x1 25mg/kg Not to exceed 100mg/kg in a 24 hour period

Chloral Hydrate Expect a moderate decrease in heart rate and blood pressure in patients ASA I-II For infants < 6 months there is ↑ risk for apnea and hypoxia. Age a limiting factor. High failure rate in children > 4 years.

Pentobarbital : Nembutal® Barbituate- Non elective central nervous system depressants primarily used as Hypnotic sedative for non painful procedures.

Nembutal PO/Rectal/IM/IV Dose for procedural sedation: 4mg/kg, may repeat 2mg/kg, max 100mg

Nembutal: precautions Rapid IV injection ie, can cause respiratory depression, apnea, laryngospasm, bronchospasm and hypotension Recommended to infuse IV dose over minutes. Can significantly decrease cardiac output and should be avoided with CHF

Benzodiazepines Midazolam- Versed® Lorazepam - Ativan® Induce anterograde amnesia (not retrograde) May have some opioid sparing effect by ↓ anticipatory pain response

Midazolam -® Versed Most commonly used Benzo for preoperative and pre-procedural sedation. Undergoes hepatic metabolism and renal excretion and prolonged effects seen with dysfunction of either system Sedative, amnestic and anxiolytic with no analgesic properties Commonly used with an opioid analgesic such as Fentanly®

Versed® Onset in 1 to 2 minutes Duration 30 min Caution for respiratory depression and hypotension

Dosage for children having procedures: PO; 0.5 mg/kg/dose may repeat once with 0.25mg/kg/dose. Max dose: 20mg. IV: mg/kg dose. May repeat over several minutes to a max dose of mg/kg. Intranasal: mg/kg. May repeat in 15 min Adults: 0.5 mg to 2mg slow push over at least 2 min. Usual dose needed is 2.5 – 5 mg. > 5mg generally not needed.

Fentanyl- Sublimaze® Used in combination with Versed for many years due to rapid onset and effectiveness Synthetic opioid Metabolized by the liver Short duration of effect Pure analgesic (should not be used alone) Least histamine release of opiates

Caution: Chest rigidity with rapid infusion and hypotension

Fentanyl Dosage for Pediatrics: -IM or IV mcg/kg/dose -onset 1-2 min -lasts 30 minutes

Etomidate Classified as a General Anesthetic Ultra short acting nonbarbiturate hypnotic used for the induction of Anesthesia Used for Sedation in Adults 0.2mg/kg IV given over seconds Onset <1minutes Duration 3-5 minutes Limited data, Action too short for some procedures

Ketamine-Ketalar® Classified as a general anesthetic Rapid acting dissociative anesthetic that produces a profound analgesic effect Gaining favor in children due to reliable effects and strong safety profile

Ketamine When patients are on ketamine they may appear awake. Eyes may remain open, they may have nystagmus. Ketamine is a potent phencyclidine deriviative Produces potent analgesia and rapid sedation while it preserves respiratory drive and airway protective reflexes

Ketamine IV 1-2 mg/kg/dose -Onset is 1 minute -Duration minutes IM 2-4 mg -onset 5 minutes -duration minutes

Ketamine Caution : Nystagmus can occur along with hypersecretions, agitation Delirium, vomiting, myoclonus and laryngospasm

Propofol- Classified as a general anesthetic -Lower doses sedation hypnosis Anmestic, anxiolytic, antiemetic, and antiepileptic properties No Analgesic effects

Propofol Dosing mg/kg/ dose over seconds Onset seconds Duration minutes For prolonged procedures may require continuous infusion mcg/kg/minute. (smaller children may require smaller infusion rates.

Propofol Caution Profound Respiratory Depression Profound Irreversible bradycardia Profound Hypotension Avoid with Soy or Egg allergies