Sedation practice for paediatric nuclear medicine procedures in Denmark related to EANM guidelines.

Hell J Nucl Med

Department of Nuclear Medicine, Aalborg University Hospital, Hobrovej 18-22, DK-9000 Aalborg, Denmark.

Published: February 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aimed to investigate the sedation practices used for paediatric nuclear medicine exams across Denmark.
  • All 18 nuclear medicine departments responded to the questionnaire, revealing variation in the number of paediatric exams conducted and sedation practices, with about 50% of sites regularly using sedation for younger children, while sedation was rarely used for infants and older children.
  • There were notable differences in sedation practices among departments, with some using it more frequently than recommended by existing guidelines, and benzodiazepines and barbiturates being the most commonly used sedatives.

Article Abstract

Objective: The objective of this study was to examine sedation practices for paediatric nuclear medicine examinations.

Methods: A questionnaire was sent to all nuclear medicine departments in Denmark about sedation practices during 2012.

Results: The response rate was 100% (18 departments). Three departments did not examine children at all. The total number of paediatric examinations among the remaining 15 sites varied from 20 to 1,583 (median 191). Sedation practice showed that approximately 50% of the sites regularly (>50% of the patients) used pharmacological sedation for renography in children aged 6-12 months and 1-3 years. A minority of centres (∼15%) regularly used sedation in children aged 0-6 months, and no sites regularly used sedation in children aged and 4-6 years. Similar findings were found for renal scintigraphy. However, one large site used no sedation in children aged 1-3 years for renography but approximately 50% of patients used it in the same age group receiving renal scintigraphy with SPET. There was a trend for reduced use of sedation with increasing total number of paediatric medicine procedures. The most frequently used agents were benzodiazepines and barbiturates. The most common route of administration was rectal, oral, and intravenous.

Conclusion: The sedation practices varied considerably among Danish nuclear medicine departments. The sedation of children in clinical practice seemed to be more prevalent than is recommended by guidelines.

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