AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to identify factors that influence the time it takes for children to be extubated after general anesthesia during ambulatory surgery, emphasizing the need for rapid turnover in operating rooms without sacrificing safety.
  • Researchers analyzed data from 148 children aged 1-6 years, focusing on various clinical measures such as vital signs and anesthesia types (sevoflurane or propofol) during surgeries lasting less than 2 hours.
  • Findings indicate that mean end-tidal carbon dioxide (mETCO) and mean body temperature (mBT) during surgery are significant factors affecting extubation time, highlighting the importance of monitoring these vital signs to prevent delays in recovery.

Article Abstract

Background: In pediatric general anesthesia, our goal should be quicker extubation to facilitate rapid turnover in the operating room without compromising on safety and quality of anesthesia. Although many studies have focused on improving safety and pursuing a higher quality of recovery, factors related to anesthesia emergence remain unclear. We must, therefore, identify factors that influence the process of emergence from general anesthesia in children.

Findings: We retrospectively examined 148 children (aged 1-6 years, American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status: 1-2) who had undergone <2 h of ambulatory surgery. Clinical measures included time from the end of surgery to extubation (extubation time), age, height, weight, surgical time, mean indirect blood pressure during surgery, mean heart rate during surgery, mean end-tidal carbon dioxide during surgery (mETCO), mean body temperature during surgery (mBT), and total amount of fentanyl. Anesthetic procedures involved sevoflurane or propofol. Multiple regression analysis revealed that mETCO ( < 0.01) and mBT ( < 0.01) were independent clinical factors associated with extubation time following pediatric ambulatory surgery.

Conclusions: This study of 148 pediatric patients demonstrated that anesthesia emergence may be associated with mBT and mETCO following pediatric ambulatory surgery. These results show that perioperative vital signs are important in the prevention of delayed emergence for pediatric patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5804621PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40981-017-0108-3DOI Listing

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