Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Higher risk of opioid-induced respiratory depression in children with neurodevelopmental disability: a retrospective cohort study of 12 904 patients 

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Higher risk of opioid-induced respiratory depression in children with neurodevelopmental disability: a retrospective cohort study of 12 904 patients "— Presentation transcript:

1 Higher risk of opioid-induced respiratory depression in children with neurodevelopmental disability: a retrospective cohort study of 12 904 patients  M.A. Jay, B.M. Thomas, R Nandi, R.F. Howard  British Journal of Anaesthesia  Volume 118, Issue 2, Pages (February 2017) DOI: /bja/aew403 Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

2 Fig 1 Posterior distributions of the effect of having neurodevelopmental disability on the risk of respiratory depression (a) and serious adverse events (b). AUC>1, area under the curve with an odds ratio >1; CrI, credibility interval. British Journal of Anaesthesia  , DOI: ( /bja/aew403) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions

3 Fig 2 Plots showing the effect of morphine on the predicted probability of RD events (a) and SAE (b) in the NDG and CG. Dashed lines are 95% credibility intervals (credibility intervals represent the range of plausible predicted probabilities of events across the stated range of morphine doses that are predicted by the final model). CG, control group; NDG, neurodevelopmental disability group; RD, respiratory depression; SAE, serious adverse events. British Journal of Anaesthesia  , DOI: ( /bja/aew403) Copyright © 2017 The Author(s) Terms and Conditions


Download ppt "Higher risk of opioid-induced respiratory depression in children with neurodevelopmental disability: a retrospective cohort study of 12 904 patients "

Similar presentations


Ads by Google