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Propofol and Halothane versus Sevoflurane in paediatric day-case surgery :induction and recovery characteristic from B

Propofol and Halothane versus Sevoflurane in paediatric day-case surgery :induction and recovery characteristic from British Journal of Anaesthesia April 2003 . Economic pressure Increase in day-case elective surgery In UK > 50 % elective surgery Day-case surgery

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Propofol and Halothane versus Sevoflurane in paediatric day-case surgery :induction and recovery characteristic from B

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  1. Propofol and Halothane versus Sevoflurane in paediatric day-case surgery :induction and recovery characteristic from British Journal of Anaesthesia April 2003

  2. Economic pressure Increase in day-case elective surgery In UK > 50 % elective surgery Day-case surgery Avoidance of an overnight admission Minimal lifestyle dsruption

  3. Day-case Surgery : Highest quality during and aftersurgery care : Minimized postoperative morbidity - Pain - nausea and vomitting ( PONV)

  4. Halothane Sevoflurane/Propofol Sevoflurane Low blood-gas solubility Non pungent smell Rapid induction of,emergence from anaethesia Propofol Rapid emergence PONV Propofol < Sevoflurane

  5. Methods Population : Aged 3-12 yr , General/ENT surgery October 1999- January 2001 To detect a reduction of PONV 20  10 % Required 440 population Fit to Hospital Day-case protocol

  6. Precluded Factor History of Allergic or other serious adverse experience of anaesthesia Severe cardiovascular Respiratory, Metabolic , Central nervous system disease anticipated airway management problem anaesthetic regimen include Succinylcholine

  7. 322 children were studied Randomise to one of two study group Group P/H : iv Propofol(+lidocaine) induction Halothane/Nitrous oxide maintenance Group S : Sevoflurane /Nitrous oxide induction and maintenance

  8. On admission - topical anaesthetic cream apply to both hand - Parents were present during induction - routine monitoring : NIBP , EKG , Pulse oximetry : Gas monitoring (inspire+expire) - carbon dioxide - volatile agent concentration

  9. Can’t blind Anaesthetist Drug dose individual Anaesthetist FGS was fixed at 70-100 ml/kg/min via Mapleson A/F 50-70% Nitrous Oxide

  10. Airway maintenance Non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent Individual to Anaesthetist

  11. After Induction Diclofenac 12.5/25 mg suppository (Acetaminophen if allergr to DCF) Intra operative opioid analgesia : Fentanyl / Alfentanyl ( exclude if use Morphine ) Prophylactic antiemetic drugs were not permitted

  12. All datas were collected Children can leave RR when awake Return to community was allow when The children were ambulatory

  13. The Primary outcome measure was PONV PONV SCORE 0 = absence 1 = nausea only 2 = one emetic episode 3 = multipleemetic episode

  14. In recovery room Nurse was asked to judge mental stage alert and awake drowsy agited and distressed

  15. After discharge Parent was interviewed by phone :economic evaluation :future for anaesthetic induction technic, shoud their child again require

  16. Analysis SAS 6.12 and SPSS 10 Chi-square PONVMann-Whitney U-test Logistic regression analysis

  17. Table 1 Time measures employed with their definitions Time Definition Induction Time from commencing induction to patient entering theatre Maintenance Time from entering theatre to time when maintenance agents discontinued Recovery Time from maintenance agent discontinuation to leaving the anaesthetic recovery room to return to the postoperative ward Discharge Time from return to the postoperative ward to discharge home

  18. Table 2 Number of parents/guardians declining to take part in the trial with their reasons Reason for refusal n Do not want volatile induction 59 No reason/‘don’t like the idea’ 19 No time 12 I want anaesthetist to choose anaesthetic 7 Do not want i.v. induction 6 Been in study before 5 Legal reasons 4 Concurrent disease 3 Want same anaesthetic as previously 3 Total 118

  19. Table 3Patients withdrawn from trial after randomization,with reasons Reason for withdrawal n Protocol violation 15 Operation cancelled 5 Withdrawal of consent 5 Total 25

  20. Table 4Patient’s age, sex, and surgery type with randomization group ( 2-test) Group P/H Group S P-value N 159 163 Age in years, mean (range)7.2 (3.0–13.0) 7.1 (2.9–12.9) n.s. Female ENT 45 42 n.s. Male ENT 70 65 n.s. Female general surgery 7 6 n.s. Male general surgery 37 50 n.s. Intraoperative opioids 34 24 n.s.

  21. Table 5 Induction time, maintenance time, total anaesthesia time, time in recovery, and time from recovery to ready for home discharge, in minutes, by randomization group. Values are mean (SD). (Student’s t-test) Group P/H Group S P-value Induction time 3.1 (1.9) 5.0 (2.3) <0.001 Maintenance time 9.5 (7.1) 10.1 (6.7) 0.45 Total anaesthesia time 12.6 (7.8) 15.1 (7.7) <0.01 Recovery time 26.4 (8.9) 23.2 (8.8) 0.002 Time to discharge 136.9 (127.2) 136.6 (96.4) 0.976

  22. Table 6 Induction adverse events by randomization group Group P/H Group S P-value Pain on injection 22 0 <0.001 Excitatory movement 10 30 0.002 Laryngospasm 0 4 0.123 Breath-holding 0 2 0.499 Cough 11 9 0.545 2-test, Fisher’s exact test.

  23. Table 7 Recovery mental state by randomization group. ( 2-test) Group P/H Group S P-value Alert and awake 98 101 0.802 Drowsy 45 20 <0.001 Agitated and distressed 15 42 <0.001

  24. Table 8 Nausea and vomiting in recovery and on the postoperative ward by randomization group. (Mann–Whitney U-test) Group P/H Group S P-value Recovery  None 156 154 0.095  Nausea 2 3  One emetic episode 1 6  Multiple emetic episodes 0 0 Postoperative ward  None 149 145 0.034  Nausea 4 11  One emetic episode 2 6  Multiple emetic episodes 1 2

  25. Table 8 Nausea and vomiting in recovery and on the postoperative ward by randomization group. (Mann–Whitney U-test) Group P/H Group S P-value Recovery None 156 154 0.095  Nausea 2 3  One emetic episode 1 6  Multiple emetic episodes 0 0 Postoperative ward None 149145 0.034  Nausea 4 11  One emetic episode 2 6  Multiple emetic episodes 1 2

  26. Table 9 Logistic regression for any nausea or vomiting on the postoperative ward, by randomization group, sex, surgical speciality and age P-value Randomization group 0.034 Sex 0.110 Surgical speciality 0.139 Age 0.498

  27. Table 10 Parental preference for future anaesthetic induction by randomization group. ( 2-test) Group P/H Group S P-value Lost to follow up 62 I.V. 88 25 <0.001 Volatile 44 102 No preference 1 0

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