| Home | E-Submission | Sitemap | Contact Us |  
top_img
J Korean Soc Emerg Med > Volume 21(1); 2010 > Article
Journal of The Korean Society of Emergency Medicine 2010;21(1): 104-109.
The Efficacy of Rectal Thiopental According to the Enema Positions for Pediatric Sedation
Ji Sook Lee, Kyoung Chan Ahn, Won Cheol Lee, Sang Cheon Choi, Jung Hwan Ahn, Kug Jong Lee, Gi Woon Kim
Department of Emergency Medicine, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea. flyingguy@paran.com
ABSTRACT
PURPOSE:
We wanted to compare the efficacy of rectal thiopental according to the enema position for pediatric sedation in the emergency department
METHODS:
One hundred sixty patients were sedated with rectal thiopental for CT or laceration repairs. The dosage of thiopental was 25 mg/kg and second dose was 15 mg/kg if the patient was not sedated. After administration, one group was positioned erect for 5 minutes and other group was positioned supine for 5 minutes. After the patients were sedated, we checked the Ramsay scales and the FLACC scales during compression by a BP cuff and/or injection of local anesthetics. All the patients were monitored for their oxygen saturation and their vital signs
RESULTS:
Successful sedations and adequate procedures were obtained in each group: 95.2% in the erect group and 94.7% in the supine group. The induction time and recovery time after the first injected dose were not significantly different between the groups: 16+/-6 min and 57+/-3 min in the erect group and 16+/-8 min, 61+/-4 min in the supine group. After second dose injection, the induction and recovery time were not different between both groups. The Ramsay scale and FLACC scale during compression by a BP cuff were not different in the two groups. As compared to the FLACC scale for measuring pain during injecting local anesthetics to repair lacerations, the percentage of patients who had their pain recorded via the FLACC pain scale as 0 were different; 25.9% in a erect group and 4.5% in a supine group. But the difference between the groups was not significat (p=0.1). There were no significant side effects during the total sedations.
CONCLUSION:
The efficacy when administrating rectal thiopental was not significantly different as related to the enema positions.
Key words: Pediatric, Sedation, Rectal, Thiopental
TOOLS
PDF Links  PDF Links
Full text via DOI  Full text via DOI
Download Citation  Download Citation
Share:      
METRICS
1,303
View
15
Download
Related articles
The Efficacy and Safety of Rectal Thiopental Sodium for Sedation of Children in the Emergency Department  2003 October;14(4)
The Efficacy of a Critical Event Monitoring System for Critical Care  2009 December;20(6)
Editorial Office
The Korean Society of Emergency Medicine
TEL: +82-62-226-1780   FAX: +82-62-224-3501   E-mail: 0012194@csuh.co.kr
About |  Browse Articles |  Current Issue |  For Authors and Reviewers
Copyright © The Korean Society of Emergency Medicine.                 Developed in M2PI