The purpose of this study is to evaluate the use of intranasal dexmedetomidine to reduce the incidence of emergence delirium during general sevoflurane anesthesia in a pediatric population receiving pressure equalization tubes in one or more ear.
Emergence delirium has been described as a dissociated state of consciousness in which the child is irritable, uncompromising, uncooperative, incoherent, inconsolably crying, moaning, kicking or thrashing. The children can run the gambit from restlessness and incoherence to combative and psychotic. The incidence of emergence agitation or delirium is 80% after a procedure with sevoflurane-induced anesthesia. Dexmedetomidine has been shown to have sedative and analgesic effects. In the pediatric population, it has been shown to provide sedation for radiographic procedures. Intravenously, it is has been shown to decrease emergence delirium following sevoflurane based anesthesia. The ability to administer a medication intranasally might solve the problem of emergence delirium and emergence agitation posed by the young patients undergoing myringotomy and tube placement.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE
Enrollment
40
2 mcg/kg intranasally 30 minutes prior to surgery
a volume of intranasal saline, calculated based on body weight, will be given 30 minutes prior to surgery
Ochsner Clinic Foundation
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
To evaluate the use of intranasal dexmedetomidine to reduce the incidence of emergence delirium in general sevoflurane anesthesia.
Time frame: 2 hours post-surgery
Evaluate post-operative pain, emesis, and time to release from recovery.
Time frame: 2 hours post-surgery
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