Mask ventilation has great importance during anesthesia induction because it is the only way to oxygenate patients who have lost consciousness and spontaneous breathing. Adequate muscle relaxation and depth of anesthesia may assist with mask ventilation. It is known that premedication to reduce anxiety has a relaxing effect on airway muscles. Midazolam is frequently used in premedication because it has a rapid onset of action and does not cause hemodynamic changes. In addition, midazolam may relax the airway by acting directly on the airway smooth muscle and thus facilitate mask ventilation during anesthesia induction. In this study, we will conduct a randomized controlled trial to evaluate the effect of midazolam premedication on facilitating mask ventilation in children.
American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) class I and II patients aged 2-10 years who are scheduled for any elective surgery under general anesthesia will be enrolled. Patients in midazolam group will be treated with midazolam premedication (3 cc mixture of 0.1 mg/kg midazolam and normal saline; maximum midazolam dose, 3 mg) intravenously at waiting area 3 minutes before transportation to an operating room, while 3 cc normal saline will be administered to control group patients. Difficulty of mask ventilation during induction of general anesthesia will be evaluated with the Han Mask Scale. Muscle relaxants will be given for intubation after evaluation. The anxiety and sedation level of patients will be estimated one minute before the intervention and one minute before anesthetic induction in an operating room. Interventıon descriptıon Patients enrolled in this study are randomly allocated to midazolam group or control group. Total 120 patients will be enrolled. Each group consists of 60 patients. Patients of midazolam group will be treated with midazolam premedication (3 cc mixture of 0.1 mg/kg midazolam and normal saline; maximum midazolam dose, 3 mg) intravenously at waiting area 3 minutes before transportation to an operating room. Control group patients are treated with 3 cc normal saline at waiting area 3 minutes before transportation to an operating room. In anesthesia induction, propofol 2 mg/kg will be given. Before the patients were given muscle relaxants, the patients were evaluated with the Han's mask scale.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
120
Patients of midazolam group will be treated with midazolam premedication (3 cc mixture of 0.1 mg/kg midazolam and normal saline; maximum midazolam dose, 3 mg) intravenously at waiting area 3 minutes before transportation to an operating room. In anesthesia induction, propofol 2 mg/kg will be given.Before the patients were given muscle relaxants, the patients were evaluated with the Han scale.
Control group patients are treated with 3 cc normal saline at waiting area 3 minutes before transportation to an operating room. In anesthesia induction, propofol 2 mg/kg will be given. Before the patients were given muscle relaxants, the patients were evaluated with the Han's grading scale.
Karaman Training and Research Hospital
Karaman, Turkey (Türkiye)
Difficulty of mask ventilation (Han's grading scale)
The Han's scale is a four point grading scale, assigns points based on escalating levels of intervention necessary to ventilate the lungs such as the use of an airway device, two-person ventilation, which are all intended to overcome upper airway resistance to ventilation. (1 point: Easy mask ventilation, 4 point: Impossible - unable to mask ventilate)
Time frame: At 30 seconds after loss of consciousness
Anxiety level, mYPAS (0-100)
The modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale (mYPAS) is an observational measure of children's preoperative anxiety consisting of 27 items divided into 5 categories: Activity, Vocalizations, Emotional Expressivity, State of Arousal and Use of Parent. Scores range from 22.5 to 100 with higher scores indicating greater anxiety.
Time frame: One minute before the intervention in waiting area, and one minute before the anesthetic induction in operating room
Sedation level (Modified Observer's assessment of alertness/sedation (MOAA/S) scale)
One minute before the intervention in the waiting area, and one minute before the anesthetic induction in the operating room sedation levels were evaluated with MOAA/S scale. The Modified Observer's Assessment of Alertness/Sedation (MOAA/S) Scale was developed to measure the level of alertness in subjects who are sedated. The Modified Observer's Assessment of Alertness and Sedation (MOAA/S) scale is frequently used in sedation-related drug and device studies to assess a subject's level of sedation. The MOAA/S ranges from 0 to 5, with a score of 5 defined as awake or minimally sedated, and a score of 0 defined as general anesthesia.
Time frame: One minute before the intervention in waiting area, and one minute before the anesthetic induction in operating room
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