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Sedation and Analgesia

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Assessment & Goals - Tiny Patient Comfort

  • Rationale: Systematic assessment prevents adverse effects of pain/agitation & over-sedation.
  • Primary Goals: Patient comfort, anxiolysis, amnesia; facilitate interventions, prevent self-harm.
  • Challenges: Communication barriers, developmental variations in pain expression.
  • Pain Scales (Age-Appropriate):
    • Neonates: NIPS (Neonatal Infant Pain Scale)
    • Infants/Non-verbal (<3 yrs): FLACC (Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability)
    • Verbal Children (3-7 yrs): Wong-Baker FACES Pain Rating Scale
    • Older Children (>8 yrs): Numeric Rating Scale (NRS)
  • Sedation Scales:
    • COMFORT-B Scale (ventilated patients)
    • Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale (RASS/pRASS)
    • State Behavioral Scale (SBS)
  • Titration: Adjust therapy to achieve predefined sedation/analgesia targets; frequent reassessment vital.

⭐ FLACC scale (Face, Legs, Activity, Cry, Consolability) scores each category 0-2 (total score 0-10); widely used for non-verbal children.

FLACC Pain Scale for Pediatric Pain Assessment

Pediatric Analgesics - Pain Relief Parade

  • Non-Opioids: First-line, mild-moderate pain.
    • Paracetamol (PCM):
      • Central COX inhibitor.
      • Dose: 10-15 mg/kg/dose PO/PR q4-6h; IV 15 mg/kg/dose q6h. Max 75 mg/kg/day.
      • SE: Hepatotoxicity (>150 mg/kg dose); Antidote: NAC.
    • NSAIDs (e.g., Ibuprofen):
      • Peripheral COX inhibitor.
      • Ibuprofen Dose: 5-10 mg/kg/dose PO q6-8h. Max 40 mg/kg/day.
      • SE: GI upset, renal impairment. Avoid <3-6 mo.
  • Opioids: Moderate-severe pain.
    • Morphine:
      • Dose: IV 0.05-0.1 mg/kg/dose q2-4h.
      • SE: Resp. depression, hypotension, nausea.
    • Fentanyl:
      • Dose: IV 0.5-2 mcg/kg/dose q30-60min. Rapid onset.
      • SE: Chest wall rigidity, resp. depression.

      ⭐ Fentanyl is preferred over morphine in hemodynamically unstable patients due to less histamine release and better cardiovascular stability.

    • Tramadol:
      • Dose: 1-2 mg/kg/dose PO/IV q4-6h.
      • SE: Nausea, seizures (high dose).
  • Opioid Reversal: Naloxone 0.1 mg/kg (max 2mg/dose).

Pediatric Sedatives - Calm & Composed

  • Benzodiazepines (BZDs): GABA-A agonists. Anxiolysis, amnesia.
    • Midazolam: Short. IV 0.05-0.1 mg/kg.
    • Lorazepam: Intermediate. IV 0.05-0.1 mg/kg.
    • Reversal: Flumazenil (⚠️ seizure risk).
  • Alpha-2 Agonists: Central α2. Sedation, anxiolysis, mild analgesia. Min. resp. depression.
    • Dexmedetomidine: IV Load 0.5-1 mcg/kg; Maint 0.2-1.5 mcg/kg/hr.
      • 📌 DEX-MED: Calm, Slow HR, Easy Breath.
      • SE: Bradycardia, hypotension.

⭐ Dexmedetomidine: sedation without significant respiratory depression, aids ventilator weaning.

  • Propofol: GABA-A. Rapid on/off.
    • IV: Induct 1-3 mg/kg; Maint 25-100 mcg/kg/min.
    • ⚠️ PRIS: >4 mg/kg/hr >48h (acidosis, rhabdo).
  • Ketamine: NMDA antagonist. Dissociative sedation, analgesia.
    • IV 1-2 mg/kg. Airway reflexes preserved. Bronchodilation.
    • SE: Emergence reactions, ↑secretions.
  • Barbiturates (Phenobarbital): GABA-A. Deep sedation, anticonvulsant.
    • SE: Resp. depression, hypotension.

Protocols & Problems - Navigating Nuances

  • Procedural Sedation (PSA):
    • Goal: Safe analgesia & anxiolysis.
    • Key: Pre-sedation assessment. 📌 Mnemonic: SOAP ME (Suction, Oxygen, Airway, Pharmacy, Monitors, Equipment).
    • Monitor: SpO₂, HR, RR; capnography.
    • ⚠️ Reversals (Naloxone, Flumazenil) ready.
  • Sedation in Mechanical Ventilation (MV):
    • Target: RASS -2 to 0 or SBS -1 to +1.
    • Strategy: Analgesia-first (opioids), then sedatives (benzos, dexmedetomidine). Daily Sedation Interruption (DSI).
  • Complications:
    • Withdrawal: WAT-1 score > 4. Gradual taper.
    • Delirium: Assess with CAPD/pCAM-ICU. Non-pharmacological first.
    • Tolerance: ↑ dose for effect. Consider opioid rotation.

⭐ Dexmedetomidine provides sedation without significant respiratory depression, useful for weaning.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Pain assessment is crucial; use age-appropriate scales (FLACC, NIPS, Wong-Baker).
  • Prioritize non-pharmacological methods (sucrose, swaddling) for minor procedural pain.
  • Midazolam: common anxiolytic/sedative; monitor for respiratory depression.
  • Ketamine: provides analgesia/sedation, preserves airway reflexes; risk of emergence reactions.
  • Fentanyl: potent opioid analgesic; risk of chest wall rigidity, apnea.
  • Propofol: rapid onset/offset; monitor for hypotension, Propofol Infusion Syndrome (PRIS).
  • Always ensure continuous vital signs monitoring during pediatric sedation.

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