Litcius/Paper detail

Remimazolam benzenesulfonate anesthesia effectiveness in cardiac surgery patients under general anesthesia

Fang Tang, Jianmin Yi, Hongyan Gong, Ziyun Lu, Jie Chen, Bei Fang, Chen Chen, Zhiyi Liu

2021World Journal of Clinical Cases73 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Sedation with propofol injections is associated with a risk of addiction, but remimazolam benzenesulfonate is a comparable anesthetic with a short elimination half-life and independence from cell P450 enzyme metabolism. Compared to remimazolam, remimazolam benzenesulfonate has a faster effect, is more quickly metabolized, produces inactive metabolites and has weak drug interactions. Thus, remimazolam benzenesulfonate has good effectiveness and safety for diagnostic and operational sedation. AIM: To investigate the clinical value of remimazolam benzenesulfonate in cardiac surgery patients under general anesthesia. METHODS: A total of 80 patients who underwent surgery in the Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery from August 2020 to April 2021 were included in the study. Using a random number table, patients were divided into two anesthesia induction groups of 40 patients each: remimazolam (0.3 mg/kg remimazolam benzenesulfonate) and propofol (1.5 mg/kg propofol). Hemodynamic parameters, inflammatory stress response indices, respiratory function indices, perioperative indices and adverse reactions in the two groups were monitored over time for comparison. RESULTS: < 0.05). CONCLUSION: Compared with propofol, remimazolam benzenesulfonate benefited cardiac surgery patients under general anesthesia by reducing hemodynamic fluctuations. Remimazolam benzenesulfonate influenced the surgical stress response and respiratory function, thereby reducing anesthesia-related adverse reactions.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAnesthesiaPropofolSedationIntubationPerioperativeCardiac indexSurgeryHemodynamicsCardiac outputAnesthesia and Sedative AgentsIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersCardiac Ischemia and Reperfusion