在儿童耳科手术中使用咪达唑仑和芬太尼加强氯胺酮麻醉:一项前瞻性随机研究。

IF 1 Q3 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL Journal of Yeungnam medical science Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-05-23 DOI:10.12701/jyms.2024.00276
Seong Min Han, So Young Kwon, Jang Hyeok In, Jin Deok Joo
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:鼓室造口术置管术(MTI)是一种表层外科手术,用于预防浆液性中耳炎患儿的听力损失。由于静脉麻醉(通常是氯胺酮)能在不影响气道反射的情况下诱导镇静,因此是这种手术的首选。然而,仅使用氯胺酮可能不够,并有可能导致手术过程中的自发运动。本研究评估了咪达唑仑和芬太尼作为氯胺酮的辅助药物在减少 MTI 期间自发运动和提高恢复质量方面的效果:这项研究包括两组,每组 30 名患者:一组接受氯胺酮(1.5 毫克/千克)与等量生理盐水静脉注射(K 组),另一组接受咪达唑仑、芬太尼和氯胺酮(分别为 0.05 毫克/千克、1 微克/千克和 1.5 毫克/千克;MFK 组)的联合治疗。我们对副作用、术中患者活动、外科医生满意度和术后躁动评分进行了评估:结果:MFK 组的患者活动评分明显较低(p结论:使用咪达唑仑-芬太尼-氯胺酮复合制剂可有效减少接受 MTI 的儿童在手术期间的自发运动和恢复期的躁动,同时不会延长出院时间。
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Enhancing ketamine anesthesia with midazolam and fentanyl for children's ear surgery: a prospective randomized study.

Background: Myringotomy with tympanostomy tube insertion (MTI) is a superficial surgical procedure used to prevent hearing loss in children with serous otitis media. Intravenous anesthesia, often ketamine, is preferred for this procedure because of its ability to induce sedation without compromising airway reflexes. However, ketamine alone may be insufficient and potentially lead to spontaneous movement during surgery. This study evaluated the effectiveness of midazolam and fentanyl as adjuvants to ketamine in reducing spontaneous movement during MTI and enhancing the quality of recovery.

Methods: This study involved two groups of 30 patients each: one group received intravenous ketamine (1.5 mg/kg) with an equal volume of normal saline (K group), while the other received a combination of midazolam, fentanyl, and ketamine (0.05 mg/kg, 1 μg/kg, and 1.5 mg/kg, respectively; MFK group). We assessed side effects, intraoperative patient movement, surgeon satisfaction, and emergence agitation scores.

Results: The MFK group exhibited significantly lower scores for patient movement (p<0.01) and emergence agitation (p<0.01) and markedly higher surgeon satisfaction scores (p<0.01) than the K group.

Conclusion: Administering a midazolam-fentanyl-ketamine combination effectively reduced spontaneous movement during surgery and emergence agitation during recovery without prolonging discharge times in children undergoing MTI.

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