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Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ
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Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Dec 13, 2015

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Page 1: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Otto F Sabando DO FACOEPProgram Director

Emergency Medicine ResidencySt. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center

Paterson NJ

Page 2: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Dr MurrayUsing cocktail for sleepJune 25 the following administered:

valium 10 mgativan 2 mg

repeated dosesversed 2mg

repeated dosespropofol 25mg

Page 3: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Procedural Sedation and Analgesia (PSA) Administer sedatives, analgesics, and/or

dissociative agents to induce a state allowing the patient to tolerate an unpleasant procedure while maintaining cardiorespiratory function

Page 4: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Minimal sedation (anxiolysis) Drug induced state during which patients

respond normally to verbal commands Cognitive function and coordination may be

impaired

Page 5: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Moderate sedation (formerly “conscious sedation”) Drug induced depression of consciousness

during which patients respond purposefully to verbal commands either alone or accompanied by light tactile stimulation

No interventions for airway mgt. spontaneous ventilation is adequate along with cardiovascular function

Page 6: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Dissociative sedation: Trans-like cataleptic state induced by

dissociative agent (ketamine) and characterized by profound analgesia and amnesia

Airway reflexes and cardiopulmonary systems are maintained by patient

Page 7: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Deep sedation: Drug-induced depression of consciousness

and respond to painful stimuli Ventilation usually needs to be assisted Cardiovascular function is maintained

Page 8: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

General anesthesia Drug-induced loss of consciousness Not arousable by painful stimuli Positive pressure ventilation is usually

required Cardiovascular function may be impaired

Green SM, Krauss B: Procedural sedation terminology: Moving

beyond “conscious sedation.” Ann Emerg Med 39:433,2002

Page 9: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Ideal pharmacologic agent for sedation Effective, rapid onset, easily titratable with

predictable duration of action Quickly eliminated or reversible No adverse effects Easy and painless to administer

Page 10: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Anesthetic agents Propofol (diprivan)

Lipid soluble Onset of action 6-7 min. Resolves rapidly 5-10 min Adult dose: 2-2.5 mg/kg Pediatric dose: 1mg/kg

Page 11: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Side effects: Painful at injection site Respiratory depression

Apnea incidence similar to thiopental, methohexital and etomidate

Cardiovascular Hypotension (peds and elderly)

Allergies Eggs and soy, propofol is contraindicated

Page 12: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Benefits Intractable seizure, trauma patients

Page 13: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Etomidate: Carboxylated imidazole-containing compound Induces sedation through GABA receptors in

CNS Induction agent

Rapid onset 2 min Lacks cardiovascular side effects Pain on injection Adult 0.1-0.3 mg /kg Peds 0.3-0.4 mg/kg

Page 14: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Side effects Myoclonic activity Emergence phenomenon Adrenal suppression with prolonged use

Page 15: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Anxiolytics: Benzodiazepines Treat anxiety, unruly intoxicated patients,

belligerent patients, drug induced psychosis etc.

Anticonvulsant properties No change in intracranial pressure

Page 16: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Midazolam (Versed) .02-.03mg/kg Amnesia Inhibit GABA Onset of action 3

minutes Duration of action

60-120 minutes

Page 17: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Side effects: Decreased respiratory drive Cytochrome P450 inhibitors can reduce

metabolism of versed Elderly and chronically ill patients, reduce the

dose by half

Page 18: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Dissociative agent Ketamine: sedative

analgesic, dissociates cortical and limbic systems Produces sedation,

analgesia and amnesia

1mg/kg

Page 19: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Onset of action 1 minute Effective in asthma/COPD

Bronchdilator effect Emergence reaction

Tx with benzodiazepine Multiple routes of administration

Page 20: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.
Page 21: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Contraindications to ketamine use: Age of 3 months or younger Active pulmonary infection Procedures resulting in large amounts or oral

secretions or blood History of tracheal stenosis History of angina, CHF, aneurysm,

uncontrolled HTN Intracranial increase pressure, glaucoma Psychiatric illness

Page 22: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Opioids Fentanyl (sublimaze) 80-100 times more

potent than morphine 2-4 mcg/kg titrated in

doses of 0.5-1.0 mcg/kg every 3-5 min

1/3 the dose is used in infants as metabolism is prolonged

Page 23: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Side effects Rigid chest syndrome

Non reported in the EM literature Respiratory depression

Less than morphine or meperidine

Page 24: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Fentanyl Lollipops 10-15 mcg/kg Onset of action 12-30 min. Mean time to discharge 90 min from ED Side effects

Pruritis common Vomiting 10% of patients

Page 25: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Rarely indicated Used in life-

threatening cases Should not be used

for the sake of a more rapid discharge from the ED

Page 26: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Chloral Hydrate: considered as a second line agent Sedative/hypnotic, no analgesic properties

Primarily used for infants and young children for painless diagnostic procedures

Time to sedation: 45-60 minutes

Dose 25-50 mg/kg can be given PR Time to recovery

40 minutes

Page 27: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Side effects: Ectopic ventricular beats seen 10% of patients

Page 28: Otto F Sabando DO FACOEP Program Director Emergency Medicine Residency St. Joseph’s Regional Medical Center Paterson NJ.

Always review the medical history of the patient.

Use certain medications in certain situations and watch for contraindications

Review the dosages with the nurse and make sure the weight base dose is accurate

Always monitor the patient and be prepared for unexpected complications

Make sure the patient is back to baseline prior to discharge