This prospective, randomized study is designed to compare the efficacy and safety of three sedative-analgesic agents-intramuscular ketamine, intranasal nalbuphine, and intranasal dexmedetomidine-for procedural sedation in children undergoing suture removal following cleft palate, alveolar ridge, or lip surgery. The study will include 60 children aged 6 months to 3 years, randomly assigned to one of three intervention groups. The primary objectives are to compare time to achieve adequate sedation (Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale 2-3), surgeon-rated ease of surgical procedure, and time to discharge readiness (Modified Aldrete Score ≥9). Secondary outcomes include baseline child behavior, response to drug administration, depth of sedation, response to separation from parents, and parental satisfaction, as well as monitoring of perioperative complications and vital signs. All study medications are approved and commonly used in pediatric anesthesia. The trial will be conducted using non-invasive monitoring, with intravenous access established only in case of emergency interventions. Findings from this study are expected to provide evidence to optimize pediatric sedation protocols for minor surgical procedures.
Title: Comparison of Intramuscular Ketamine and Intranasal Nalbuphine and Dexmedetomidine for Analgosedation in Children Undergoing Suture Removal After Surgery for Congenital Clefts of the Palate, Alveolar Ridge, and Lip Introduction Orofacial clefts, including cleft lip with or without cleft palate and isolated cleft palate, are among the most common congenital craniofacial anomalies. Primary correction of a cleft lip may be performed between the 6th week and the 6th month of life, considering the child's growth, identification of associated anomalies, and avoidance of general anesthesia in the neonatal period. In cases of congenital cleft palate or alveolar ridge, correction is typically completed between 6 and 12 months of age. Suture removal following these surgeries is a short procedure that requires optimal sedation and analgesia to enable efficient, rapid, and safe completion. The American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) defines procedural sedation as "a technique of administering sedatives or dissociative agents with or without analgesics to facilitate a procedure while maintaining cardiorespiratory function." The goal of sedation in pediatric patients is to avoid fear of medical professionals, injections, surgery, and the operating room environment. Effective sedation improves safety and comfort, reduces pain and anxiety, enhances the possibility of amnesia, and minimizes psychological trauma from separation from parents and exposure to an unfamiliar environment. Ketamine is a dissociative anesthetic and analgesic, an NMDA receptor antagonist synthesized in 1962. It is favored for its analgesic and amnestic effects, preservation of airway reflexes, and various routes of administration (IV, IM, oral, rectal, nasal, epidural, intrathecal). However, ketamine may cause unpleasant hallucinations and hypersalivation. It is relatively contraindicated in patients with hypertension, increased intracranial pressure, respiratory infections, or underlying neuropsychiatric disorders. Dexmedetomidine, approved by the FDA in 1999, is a selective α2-adrenoceptor agonist with strong sedative, analgesic, and anxiolytic properties, commonly used in pediatric intensive care units and diagnostic/therapeutic procedures. It may cause hypotension and bradycardia. Literature describes its pediatric use in intraoperative sedation, delirium management, postoperative analgesia, and shivering prevention. Nalbuphine hydrochloride is a kappa-opioid receptor agonist and partial mu-antagonist. It exhibits a "ceiling effect," preventing respiratory depression. Nalbuphine is safe and effective for pediatric analgesia and sedation, and is administered via subcutaneous, IM, IV, or intranasal routes. Atomized intranasal delivery, using a Mucosal Atomizer Device (MAD), avoids painful IV access, offering a simple, safe, and effective method. This study is designed to compare three sedatives-ketamine, dexmedetomidine, and nalbuphine-in children undergoing suture removal after cleft surgeries, focusing on perioperative sedation quality, procedural ease, application convenience, and safety profiles. Protocol This prospective, randomized study will be conducted at the Department of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery, University Medical Centre Ljubljana, in collaboration with anesthesiologists and surgeons. A total of 60 children aged 6 months to 3 years requiring suture removal after cleft surgeries will be enrolled. Exclusion criteria include known allergy to the study drugs, ASA status greater than II, and lack of informed parental consent. After completion of the consent process, patients will be randomized into three groups. Premedication with midazolam will be administered 30 minutes before the procedure. Group 1 will receive intramuscular ketamine (4 mg/kg) plus glycopyrrolate (4 mcg/kg) to reduce salivation. Group 2 will receive intranasal nalbuphine (0.5 mg/kg), and Group 3 intranasal dexmedetomidine (3 mcg/kg), delivered via MAD. Due to the short duration of the procedure and minimal risk, IV access will not be established unless complications arise. If sedation is insufficient to complete the procedure, inhaled sevoflurane (starting at 2%, titrated by 0.5% increments) will be used as rescue medication. Vital signs (heart rate, oxygen saturation, non-invasive blood pressure) will be monitored continuously. Blood pressure will be recorded three times: before drug administration, during the procedure, and prior to discharge. Additional monitoring will occur in case of adverse events. Heart rate and oxygen saturation will be recorded every 5 minutes before surgery, every 2 minutes during the procedure, and every 5 minutes post-procedure until discharge. Sedation onset time, procedure duration, and recovery time will be evaluated. Complications (e.g., bronchospasm, aspiration, laryngospasm) will be documented, along with sedation depth (Modified Ramsay Scale), child's response to separation from parents, and surgeon-rated ease of procedure. Statistical Methods It is expected that ketamine will demonstrate the fastest onset, dexmedetomidine the longest duration and calmest effect, and nalbuphine the most stable hemodynamics. Statistical analysis will include the Shapiro-Wilk test for normality. Normally distributed data will be expressed as mean ± SD, and non-normal data as median (IQR). Categorical variables will be presented as frequencies (%). Kruskal-Wallis test, Fisher's exact test, and Dunn's post-hoc test will be applied as appropriate. A p-value \< 0.05 will be considered statistically significant. Analyses will be performed using SPSS 13.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
60
Intramuscular administration of Ketamine at 4 mg/kg body weight for analgosedation during suture removal in children after surgery for congenital clefts. Glycopyrrolate 4 mcg/kg will be co-administered to reduce salivation.
Intranasal administration of Nalbuphine at 0.5 mg/kg body weight via mucosal atomizer device (MAD) for analgosedation during suture removal after cleft surgery in children.
Intranasal administration of Dexmedetomidine at 3 mcg/kg body weight via mucosal atomizer device (MAD) for analgosedation during suture removal after cleft surgery in children.
Department of Maxillofacial and Oral Surgery, University Medical Centre Ljubljana
Ljubljana, Slovenia
RECRUITINGTime to achieve adequate sedation (Modified Ramsay Sedation Score 2-3)
Time in minutes from administration of the study drug until the child reaches adequate sedation, defined as a Ramsay Sedation Score of 2-3. Sedation is assessed every 5 minutes by a trained clinician. Unit of Measure: Minutes
Time frame: Perioperatively, from drug administration until Modified Ramsay score 2-3 is achieved (typically within 5-20 minutes)
Sedation depth before procedure (Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale)
Sedation depth is measured using the Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale (1 = anxious/agitated, 6 = no response; 2-3 = adequate sedation). A trained clinician assesses sedation every 5 minutes after administration of the study drug, until the start of the suture removal procedure.
Time frame: Periprocedural (every 5 minutes for up to 20 minutes after study drug administration, until procedure begins)
Surgeon-rated ease of surgical procedure
Ease of suture removal as rated by the operating surgeon using a 5-point Likert scale (1 = very difficult, 5 = very easy). Unit of measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Within 5 minutes after completion of suture removal
Time to discharge from recovery room
Time in minutes from the end of the surgical procedure until the child reaches a Modified Aldrete Score of ≥9, indicating readiness for discharge from the recovery area to the hospital ward. The Aldrete score is assessed every 5 minutes by recovery room nursing staff. Unit of Measure: Minutes
Time frame: Perioperative (every 5 minutes post-procedure until Modified Aldrete Score ≥9 is achieved or until discharge from the recovery area, up to 90 minutes)
Discharge readiness (Modified Aldrete Score)
Discharge readiness assessed using the Modified Aldrete Score (range: 0-10; score ≥9 indicates clinical criteria for transfer to ward). Unit of Measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Postprocedural (every 5 minutes in recovery room until Modified Aldrete Score ≥9 is reached, up to 90 minutes post-procedure)
Baseline child behavior (Ohio Behavioral Rating Scale)
Child's baseline behavior assessed using the Ohio Behavioral Rating Scale (1 = calm/cooperative, 4 = combative/uncontrollable; higher scores = more difficult behavior). Unit of measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Baseline (within 5 minutes prior to study drug administration during the procedure)
Child's response to drug administration
Child's behavioral response during study drug administration, assessed using a 4-point scale (1 = calm acceptance, 4 = severe resistance; higher scores = greater resistance). Unit of measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Periprocedural (immediately during study drug administration)
Child's behavior during separation from parent
Behavior assessed on a 4-point separation scale (1 = excellent/easy separation, 4 = poor/difficult separation; higher scores indicate greater distress). Unit of measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Periprocedural (immediately at the time of parent-child separation)
Use of rescue Sevoflurane due to inadequate sedation
Number of participants who required additional sedation using inhaled Sevoflurane due to inadequate procedural sedation or significant patient movement during suture removal. The rescue protocol includes Sevoflurane inhalation starting at 2% concentration via facemask, with titration increased by 0.5% every minute as needed, until adequate sedation is achieved to complete the procedure safely. The indication for administration is failure to maintain adequate sedation (Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale \<2 or excessive movement interfering with surgery), as assessed by the attending anesthesiologist. Unit of Measure: Number of participants
Time frame: Intraoperatively, during the suture removal procedure
Sedation level measured by Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale during procedure
Sedation level will be assessed using the Modified Ramsay Sedation Scale (range: 1-6; higher scores indicate deeper sedation). The target for adequate sedation is defined as a score of 2-3. Sedation scores will be recorded: * every 5 minutes from study drug administration until start of procedure, * and then every 2 minutes during the procedure until completion of suture removal. This outcome complements the primary endpoint "Time to achieve adequate sedation (Ramsay 2-3)" by describing the actual sedation scores across time points. Unit of Measure: Units on a scale
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Time frame: From drug administration until end of suture removal procedure (expected duration up to 30 minutes)
Parental satisfaction with sedation
Parental satisfaction with the sedation process, assessed using a 5-point Likert scale (1 = very dissatisfied, 5 = very satisfied). Unit of measure: Units on a scale
Time frame: Collected immediately after completion of procedure.