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Clinical Trial Summary

Emergence delirium (ED) refers to a wide variety of behavioural disturbances that are commonly seen in children following emergence from anesthesia. ED can potentially be dangerous and have serious consequences for the child such as injury, increased pain, and dislodgement of medical devices, often requiring physical restraint or pharmacological control. Witnessing this behaviour can be stressful for parents, which can negatively affect their interaction with the healthcare system, and their relationship with the child, nursing staff and other healthcare providers. The investigators aim to minimize ED to reduce the distress experienced by patients and their parents. This study will compare the recovery profile of sevoflurane with that of propofol remifentanil and their associated incidence of ED. This study should enable us to determine which form of anesthesia is associated with the fewest incidences of ED in children.


Clinical Trial Description

Purpose:

In children, both propofol-only anesthesia maintenance infusions and single postoperative propofol boluses have been shown to be efficacious at reducing ED when compared with sevoflurane only [13, 17]. Methodological problems in these studies include: the administration of sedative premedications, ED provocative study designs that do not reflect reasonable clinical practice with sevoflurane, and the use of inadequately validated ED outcome tools.

Based on our extensive institutional experience with TIVA, we believe that this technique is superior to sevoflurane with respect to the incidence of ED. However, this clinical impression has never been validated in an appropriately robust investigation, and sevoflurane remains the pediatric anesthetic of choice for most other North American pediatric anesthesiologists.

Hypotheses:

1. The use of total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), rather than sevoflurane (SEVO) will reduce incidence of ED, as measured by the Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium (PAED) scale.

2. The use of TIVA will not result in longer times to laryngeal mask airway removal and post anesthetic care unit (PACU) discharge when compared to SEVO.

Objectives:

1. To compare the incidence of ED between SEVO and TIVA anesthesia in children

2. To compare times for recovery from anesthesia between the TIVA and SEVO groups

Research Method:

Recruitment of subjects: With institutional review board approval, and with written informed consent, we will recruit children, ages 2-6 years, undergoing elective strabismus surgery, a relatively minor eye procedure.

Each child will be randomly assigned to one of two groups to receive either TIVA or SEVO. We will exclude children with ASA status IV-V, developmental delay, neurological injury, psychiatric diagnosis, abnormal lipid or carbohydrate metabolism, postoperative nausea or vomiting, Body Mass Index >30, severe anxiety in the pre-operative period requiring sedative premedication or complex medical conditions.

Study design: This study is a randomized, masked clinical trial comparing induction and maintenance of anesthesia with TIVA to SEVO. Every effort will be made to maximize the masking of the observer. All patients will be scored by the Research Fellow, Dr. John Chandler, who will be masked to the anesthetic technique. To evaluate the pre and postoperative state of children we will use of the following scoring tools:

1. The Induction Compliance Checklist (ICC) will be used to evaluate patient preoperative behaviour

2. The PAED scale will be used to assess patients for ED in the PACU.

3. Pain will be assessed postoperatively by means of the face, legs, activity, cry, consolability (FLACC) score currently used in the PACU

Statistical Analysis:

Patients with a PAED score of ≥ 10 will be classified as experiencing ED. Continuous data (weight, BMI) will be analyzed with t-tests and ordinal data (FLACC, PAED, ICC) with Mann-Whitney U tests.

The primary hypothesis will be examined by means of a contingency table and Fisher's exact test. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT00885443
Study type Interventional
Source University of British Columbia
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date February 2009
Completion date August 2011

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