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Effect of Recorded Maternal Voice on Emergence Delirium in Children Under General Anesthesia

Cong Wang, Wei Wang, Shuo Wang, Rendong He, Haiqi Yang, Yong Jia, Li Chen

2021The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease15 citationsDOI

Abstract

ABSTRACT: To determine the effect of recorded maternal voice on emergence delirium (ED) in children under general anesthesia, a three-group randomized trial was conducted. A total of 102 children were randomly assigned to mother recording group (n = 34), stranger recording group (n = 34), and control group (n = 34). All subjects were assessed for ED with the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium Scale; pain with the Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, and Consolability Scale; and various recovery durations and hemodynamic parameters at six time points. One-way analysis of variance showed that the ED score was significantly lower in the mother recording group (F = 18.520, p = 0.000), and statistical significance was observed in the duration of eye opening (p = 0.001) and tracheal extubation (p = 0.002). Generalized estimating equations observed interaction effects on heart rate and blood pressure (both p = 0.000). Mothers' voice might help reduce ED in children under general anesthesia.

Topics & Concepts

AnesthesiaEmergence deliriumStatistical significanceMedicineDeliriumRandomized controlled trialAnalysis of varianceHeart rateHemodynamicsRepeated measures designBlood pressureSurgeryInternal medicineIntensive care medicineMathematicsStatisticsSevofluraneAnesthesia and Sedative AgentsIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersAnesthesia and Neurotoxicity Research
Effect of Recorded Maternal Voice on Emergence Delirium in Children Under General Anesthesia | Litcius