AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the effects of 70mg/kg oral chloral hydrate for sedation in children undergoing MRI, focusing on time to hypnosis, hemodynamic stability, and complications.
  • Conducted over 20 years with over 3,000 patients aged 1 day to 5 years, findings showed low incidence rates of desaturation, agitation, prolonged sedation, and nausea/vomiting.
  • Results indicate chloral hydrate is a stable and safe sedation option for short procedures in young children with minimal side effects.

Article Abstract

Objective: To assess the mean time to hypnosis, hemodynamic stability, and incidence of complications associated with the administration of 70mg/kg oral chloral hydrate in children scheduled for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Material And Methods: Prospective study conducted from January 2000 to January 2020 in which 3,132 patients aged between one day and 5 years underwent MRI under anaesthesia in an outpatient setting. The study population was divided into 4 subgroups: A) aged between one and 30 days; B) aged between one month and one year; C) aged between one and 3 years, and D) aged between 3 and 5 years. Study variables were: sex, age, type of examination, mean imaging time, mean time to awakening, heart rate before and after MRI, SatO, and incidence of complications such as respiratory depression (SatO below 90%), agitation during the MRI or on awakening (intense crying lasting more than 2min), prolonged sedation measured on the Steward scale, and nausea and/or vomiting during the MRI, on awakening, or at home.

Results: No notable hemodynamic alterations were observed. The incidence of desaturation was 0.41%, awakening during the test was 0.16%, prolonged sedation was 1.08%, and agitated awakening was 1.46%. Nausea and vomiting at the end of the test had an incidence of 0.73%. The P value in all cases was<.05%.

Conclusions: Chloral hydrate at a dose of 70mg/kg continues to be suitable in sedation lasting no more than one hour for non-invasive procedures in children, and is associated with adequate haemodynamic stability with practically no side effects.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.redar.2021.03.008DOI Listing

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