Sedation Agents and Techniques
- Can be administered by various means
- Administer local or regional anesthesia if applicable.
- Perform the procedure.
- Closely observe and monitor patient during entire course of procedure as well as the recovery period afterward.
- Monitor patient until awake, alert, and back to baseline function.
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
Past medical history, anesthesia history, medications, allergies, review of systems and last meal.
Physical-Exam
- BP, heart rate, respiratory rate, pulse oximetry, cardiopulmonary and neurologic exams.
- Airway assessment:
- Difficult bag-valve mask ventilation:
- Beards
- Abnormal facial contour
- Morbid obesity
- No teeth
- Patients with COPD/asthma/congestive heart failure)
- Difficult airway management:
- Short neck
- Large tongue
- Small mandible
- Mallampati scoring
- Evidence of airway obstruction (stridor, drooling, and dysphagia).
TREATMENT
MEDICATION
ALERT
Many sedative and analgesic medications can cause dose-dependent respiratory depression. Combination of 2 or more of these agents may have a synergistic effect on respiratory depression that can lead to hypoxia and apnea.
- Painless procedures (single agents):
- Methohexital
- Choral hydrate (children)
- Etomidate
- Barbiturates (pentobarbital)
- Benzodiazepines (midazolam)
- Ketamine
- Painful procedures:
- Ketamine (± barbiturates [midazolam] to reduce emergence reactions)
- Ketamine and propofol (ketofol)
- Opiates (fentanyl/remifentanil) and midazolam
- Nitrous oxide
- Propofol and opiates (fentanyl)
- Etomidate and opiates (fentanyl)
- Dexmedetomidine
- Methohexital:
- A short-acting barbiturate with rapid recovery that produces a state of unconsciousness and profound amnesia but has no analgesic properties
- Dosage (IV): 0.75–1 mg/kg with subsequent titration at 0.5 mg/kg every 2 min to required effect
- Onset: <1 min
- Duration of action: 10 min
- Side effects:
- Respiratory depression with potential apnea
- Hypotension due to myocardial depressant effect (caution with underlying myocardial disease)
- Pentobarbital:
- A short-acting barbiturate used only for
painless
procedures as a sole agent for diagnostic modalities:
- Dosage (IV): 2–5 mg/kg for children, and adults have a loading dose of 100 mg slow bolus repeated/titrated q3–5min to max. of 200–500 mg.
- Dosage (IM): 4 mg/kg
- Duration of action: 30–60 min
- Onset: IV mode acts within 30 sec, and patient is appropriately sedated within 5 min.
- Side effects: Central nervous system, respiratory depression, and bronchospasm (contraindicated in asthma/COPD)
- Benzodiazepines:
- Commonly used for minimal sedation as it causes anxiolysis and amnesia
- Midazolam:
- Short-acting agent that is lipophilic that allows penetration of the blood–brain barrier quickly
- Provides anxiolysis and amnesia but not analgesia, so should not be the sole agent for painful procedures
- Dosage (IV): 0.02–0.05 mg/kg (usual starting adult dose is 0.5–1 mg) with subsequent incremental doses at 3 min intervals to desired effect (single max. dose, 2.5 mg)
- Dosage (IM): 0.05–0.2 mg/kg
- Dosage (PO): 0.5–0.75 mg/kg (max. of 15 mg)
- Dosage (nasal): 0.2–0.5 mg/kg (max. of 5 mg)
- Onset/duration:
- IV: Fairly rapid onset (1–2 min) and short duration of action (10–40 min)
- IM, PO, and nasally: Slower onset and longer duration of action
- Cautions for benzodiazepines:
- Respiratory depression
- Hypotension
- Excessive sedation
- Effects augmented by opioids, so reduce dose by 30–50% if opioid therapy utilized simultaneously
- Effects may be reversed with flumazenil: 200 μg every 1–2 min, to effect
- Chloral hydrate:
- To be used in procedural sedation in children (<2 yr old) undergoing painless diagnostic studies
- Dosage (PO): 50–100 mg/kg with usual dose of 50–75 mg/kg (max. 2 g)
- Dosage for rectal administration: Not recommended due to erratic absorption Max. dose 1 g in infants, 2 g noninfants
- Onset: 30–45 min
- Duration of action: 2–4 hr (effects can recur up to 24 hr)
- Side effects:
- Nausea and vomiting
- Respiratory depression
- Prolonged sedation
- Rarely paradoxical excitation
- Dexmedetomidine: A short-acting, rapidly cleared α
2
-adrenergic agonist with sedative, anxiolytic, and analgesic properties:
- Dosage IV: 1 μg/kg loading dose over 5–10 min followed by infusion at 0.2–1 μg/kg/h (use half dose for elderly or less invasive procedures)
- Onset: Progressive during loading dose cycle
- Duration: 6 min after cessation of infusion
- Side effects:
- Moderate BP and heart rate reductions should be expected, but alternative agent should be used if bradycardia and/or severe heart block.
- Etomidate: Unique class of sedative–hypnotic:
- Produces amnesia and sedation but
not
analgesia
- Minimal cardiovascular and respiratory effects
- Dosage IV: 0.1–0.15 mg/kg
- Onset: <1 min
- Duration: 5 min
- Side effects:
- Myoclonus that seems to be related to dose and speed of administration
- Nausea and vomiting
- Hypotension and respiratory depression when combined with opioid or benzodiazepine
- Adrenocortical suppression
- Ketamine
- Produces analgesia, amnesia, and sedation due to its dissociative effect while maintaining spontaneous respirations and airway reflexes
- Dosage (IV): 0.5–1 mg/kg (use midazolam 0.05 mg/kg and atropine 0.01 mg/kg concurrently) with onset of action 5–10 min
- Dosage (IM): 2–4 mg/kg (combine atropine and midazolam in same syringe) with onset of action 15–25 min
- Dosage (PO): 5–10 mg/kg (use midazolam 0.5 mg/kg and atropine 0.02 mg/kg PO as well) with onset of 30–45 min
- Duration of action: IV 15–45 min; IM 30–90 min; PO 60–120 min
- Side effects:
- Hypertension and tachycardia
- Increases intracranial and intraocular pressure
- Stimulates salivary and tracheobronchial secretions
- Emergence reactions with hallucinations reported, but are less frequent in children <10 yr; the incidence can be reduced by premedication with midazolam in adults.
- Nitrous oxide
- Inhalational agent administered in 50% nitrous oxide/oxygen concentration:
- Excellent agent for quick procedures, as it provides analgesia, anxiolysis, and sedation without the need for IV placement
- Onset of action: 30–60 sec
- Duration of action: 3–5 min after ceasing inhalation
- Side effects are rare but can cause deep sedation with respiratory depression (especially if concurrent narcotic) as well as nausea and vomiting.
- Contraindications: Pregnancy, pneumothorax, and bowel obstruction
- Fentanyl
- Ultra-short acting synthetic opioid
- Analgesic properties but minimal sedative and no amnestic properties
- Dosage (IV): 1–4 μg/kg (titrate)
- Onset (IV): 30–60 sec with peak at 1–3 min
- Transmucosal 10–15 μg/kg with onset in 15–20 min:
- Oral lozenge (Oralet) allows patient to suck on drug, which then can be removed by physician or patient when adequate sedation achieved.
- Duration of action: 30 min
- Remifentanil
- Potent ultra-shorting synthetic with potent sedative and analgesic properties.
- Dosage (IV): 0.5-1 μg/kg every 2 min titrated to effect
- Onset (IV): <1 min
- Duration of action: 5 min
- Side effects of fentanyl and remifentanil:
- Respiratory depression with potential apnea
- Hypotension
- Chest wall rigidity is a rare complication when large doses given quickly.
- Use <1/3 dose in children <6 mo.
- Emesis with transmucosal preparation
- Propofol: Rapid onset and short duration make for excellent ED agent for procedural sedation:
- Produces amnesia and sedation but
not
analgesia
- Onset of action: 15–45 sec
- Dosage (IV): 0.5–1 mg/kg bolus (usually given as 20 mg boluses every 10 sec in adults until desired effect is obtained) followed by infusion of 50–75 μg/kg/min; effective total dose for adults 20–150 mg
- Duration of action: <2 min
- Side effects:
- Dose-related respiratory depression with occasional apnea (care with COPD)
- Hypotension (care with cardiomyopathy or hypovolemia)
- Pain at injection site
- Care with patients in renal failure due to accumulation of active metabolite leading to prolonged sedation
Reversal agents
- Naloxone: Opioid antagonist:
- For reversal of respiratory depression, apnea, and severe hypotension
- Dosage: 0.1–0.2 mg/kg IV/IM in incremental doses (to total of 2 mg) q1–2min to the desired reversal effect; usual adult dose of 1–2 mg effective
- Duration of action: 20–45 min
ALERT
Naloxone may induce severe opioid withdrawal (nausea and vomiting, agitation, abdominal pain with diarrhea) for those on chronic opioid therapy.
- Flumazenil
: Benzodiazepine antagonist:
- Reverses CNS depression and some degree of respiratory depression
- Dosage (IV): 0.01 mg/kg per dose (max. initial dose 0.2 mg) repeated at 1-min intervals to desired effect or max. 0.05 mg/kg or 1 mg
- Duration of action: 20–45 min