AI Article Synopsis

  • Agitation is a serious issue that requires quick and safe management, prompting a study comparing two treatment protocols: haloperidol with midazolam versus haloperidol alone.
  • Results showed that the combination treatment was significantly more effective, controlling 84% of agitation episodes with just the first dose compared to 64% with haloperidol alone (P = .002).
  • The combination also led to faster relief of agitation (median 15 minutes) compared to haloperidol alone (median 60 minutes), with minimal side effects reported.

Article Abstract

Agitation is a very distressing problem that must be controlled as quickly as possible, but using a safe method. The authors conducted a comparison of two protocols: a combination of haloperidol and midazolam and haloperidol alone. The combination drug protocol controlled 101 out of 121 (84%) episodes of agitation with only the first dose, whereas the haloperidol alone protocol controlled 47 out of 74 (64%) episodes. This difference is statistically significant (P =.002), with a post hoc analyzed power of 0.88. The median time from the first dose to the control of agitation was 15 minutes (range: 5-210) with the combination and 60 minutes (range: 10-430) with the other protocol, P <.001. There were no complications other than some transient somnolence, mainly with the combination protocol. The authors conclude that the combination of haloperidol and midazolam is effective and safe for the control of agitation in palliative care and it is more effective than haloperidol alone. Therefore, the combination should be adopted as the preferred protocol. It would be helpful if the usefulness of this protocol is confirmed by others.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15360288.2016.1231733DOI Listing

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