View clinical trials related to Sedation.
Filter by:Introduction:The application of anesthesia outside the operating room for pediatric patients has increased in recent years. For diagnostic and treatment follow-up purposes, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) requires the pediatric patient to remain still, necessitating sedation. The study aimed to determine the frequency of adverse effects and influencing factors in pediatric patients undergoing sedation during MRI. Methods: Between 19.06.2024 and 16.09.2024, estimated 500 pediatric patients who underwent MRI under sedation will be prospectively observed. All non-intubated patients under the age of 16 will be included in the study. The demographic data, comorbidities, and medications of the patients, the procedures performed, the anesthetic drugs used, the expertise duration of the anesthesiologist, and the adverse effects encountered will be recorded.
As an invasive operation, gastroscopy will cause children's nervousness, anxiety and uncooperative behavior, and even lead to the risk of bleeding and perforation, which will also affect the accuracy of the examination results.The purpose of this study is to explore the influence of different doses of esketamine on the induced dose ED95 of remazolam during gastroscopic placement in children, and to provide theoretical basis for the combined use of remimazolam besylate and esketamine in gastroscopic anesthesia in children.
To compare the efficacy of the pre-operative nebulization of a combination of dexmedetomidine and ketamine versus nebulization of dexmedetomidine alone for sedation and prevention of emergence delirium in children undergoing cleft palate repair surgeries.
Sedation is a component of the care of critically ill patients who are undergoing mechanical ventilation. Dexmedetomidine induces sedation while preserving a degree of arousability among patients in the intensive care unit (ICU), and its use has resulted in a shorter time to extubation, an increased number of days free from coma or delirium, a reduced incidence of agitated delirium, prevention of delirium, and lower mortality than other agents administered in certain populations. Hypotension and bradycardia are common side effects, which is lethal for the patients with persistent or severe hemodynamic instability. The pharmacological properties of rimazolom suggest that it is an ideal sedative drug for critically ill patients, but there is no relevant clinical research to confirm it. Therefore, this study mainly discusses the efficacy and safety of remidazolam in ICU patients with mechanical ventilation, so as to provide theoretical basis for individualized sedation treatment of patients with mechanical ventilation.
Therapeutic bronchoscopy is a common procedure to treat respiratory diseases. The procedure includes stent implantation, bronchus dilation, electronic incision, laser therapy, and so on. Most of these procedures are painful and require general anesthesia. Conventionally, the general anesthesia for therapeutic bronchoscopy was performed using laryngeal mask. But in the previous experiences, the investigators found that sedation with dexmedetomidine and remifentanil was as effect as laryngeal mask anesthesia. The present study was performed to compare the two approach for sedation or anesthesia in therapeutic bronchoscopy.
Diagnostic bronchoscopy is an invasive procedure performed to diagnose respiratory diseases. But pain has been complained by most of the patients receiving such procedures. Sedation or anesthesia was required by both of the patients and bronchoscopists. Unfortunately, no consensus has been made upon the sedation strategies. Multiple sedation approaches have been applied, such as midazolam and fentanyl, remifentanil and propofol, dexmedetomidine and propofol. The present study was designed to compare these protocols in sedation for diagnostic bronchoscopy.
comparison between propofol-fentanyl and propofol-ketamine for sedation in pediatric diagnostic gastrointestinal endoscopy.
The study sets out to assess whether in the context of nurse administered procedural sedation in the electrophysiology suite, the routine use of capnography and Integrated Pulmonary Index results in lower incidence of severe adverse respiratory events.
The interaction of analgesia and sedation ot their effect on the prognosis of surgical patients still need to be elucidated.Currently, how to optimize intra-operative Analgesia and sedation to improve the prognosis of surgical patients is still a mystery.Intra-operative nerve block provided regional analgesia of the operated knee, which reduced the dosages of sedatives and analgesics.Based on a pilot study,the investigators found a decrease of post-operative adverse composite outcomes with the use of continuous femoral nerve block (2% versus 7%) ,therefore, the investigators postulate that general analgesia with lighter sedation in combination with peripheral nerve block could reduce the post-operative morbidity compared with deeper sedation.This randomized controlled trial is designed to test this hypothesis in patients receiving unilateral knee arthroplasty.
To compare the effect of propofol and etomidate in hysteroscopy on postoperative sedation and cognitive function in elderly patients