Emergence Agitation Clinical Trial
The occurrence of emergence agitation (EA) in pediatric patients who have received
sevoflurane anesthesia is a common postoperative problem. The prevalence of EA varies
between 10% to 80% depending on the scoring system for evaluation and the anesthetic
technique used.
Many authors reported various strategies such as use of sedative premedication, change of
maintenance technique of anesthesia, or pharmacological agents administered at the end of
anesthesia to reduce the incidence and severity of EA, and to allow a smooth emergence from
sevoflurane anesthesia. Among these strategies, the use of pharmacological agents at the end
of anesthesia is not affected by anesthetic duration, and may not prolong recovery duration
of anesthesia excessively when these agents are administered as subhypnotic or small dose.
The typical agents that can be administered in this way are propofol and fentanyl.
Previous studies demonstrated that the use of either propofol or fentanyl at the end of
anesthesia could reduce the incidence of EA.
The purpose of this study is to compare the preventive effect on EA and the characteristics
of anesthesia recovery between propofol and fentanyl administered at the end of sevoflurane
anesthesia.
n/a
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Caregiver, Investigator)
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Active, not recruiting |
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