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The Impact of a Dedicated Sedation Team on the Incidence of Complications in Pediatric Procedural Analgosedation

Sofia Apostolidou, Mirna Kintscher, Gerhard Schön, Chinedu Ulrich Ebenebe, Hans-Jürgen Bartz, Dominique Singer, Christian Zöllner, Katharina Röher

2022Children14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The number of pediatric procedural sedations for diagnostic and minor therapeutic procedures performed outside the operating room has increased. Therefore, we established a specialized interdisciplinary team of pediatric anesthesiologists and intensivists (Children’s Analgosedation Team, CAST) at our tertiary-care university hospital and retrospectively analyzed the first year after implementation of the CAST. Within one year, 784 procedural sedations were performed by the CAST; 12.2% of the patients were infants <1 year, 41.9% of the patients were classified as American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) grade III or IV. Most children received propofol (79%) and, for painful procedures, additional esketamine (48%). Adverse events occurred in 51 patients (6.5%), with a lack of professional experience (OR 0.60; 95% CI 0.42−0.81) and increased propofol dosage (OR 1.33; 95% CI 1.17−1.55) being significant predictors. Overall, the CAST enabled safe and effective procedural sedation in children outside the operating room.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePropofolSedationIncidence (geometry)American society of anesthesiologistsTertiary careAdverse effectAnesthesiaRapid response teamEmergency medicineInternal medicineOpticsPhysicsAnesthesia and Sedative AgentsCardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical OutcomesAnesthesia and Neurotoxicity Research