Volume 15, Issue 3 pp. 280-286

Sevoflurane anaesthesia in paediatric patients: better than halothane?

A Michalek-Sauberer

A Michalek-Sauberer

Department of Anaesthesiology and General Intensive Care (A), University of Vienna, Vienna General Hospital, Vienna, Austria

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Wildling

Wildling

Department of Anaesthesiology and General Intensive Care (A), University of Vienna, Vienna General Hospital, Vienna, Austria

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Pusch

Pusch

Department of Anaesthesiology and General Intensive Care (A), University of Vienna, Vienna General Hospital, Vienna, Austria

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Pusch

Pusch

Department of Anaesthesiology and General Intensive Care (A), University of Vienna, Vienna General Hospital, Vienna, Austria

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First published: 09 October 2008
Citations: 1
Michalek-Sauberer Department of Anaesthesiology and General Intensive Care (A), University of Vienna, Vienna General Hospital, Waehringer Guertel 18–20, A 1090 Vienna, Austria.

Abstract

Forty-two children (aged 2–16 years) were randomly assigned to receive either sevoflurane (n=21) or halothane (n=21) in nitrous oxide/oxygen. After premedication with midazolam, anaesthesia was induced by facemask and the anaesthetic concentration was increased until loss of eyelash reflex (sevoflurane, 6%; halothane, 2.5%). Thereafter, 1–1.5 MAC of the inhalational agents were maintained until skin closure. Intra-operative analgesia was provided either by intermittent intravenous (i.v.) bolus doses of fentanyl (2–3 μg kg–1) or by a regional blockade. Induction was smooth and the time to loss of eyelash reflex was slightly shorter with sevoflurane than with halo- thane, the difference not quite reaching statistical significance (P=0.06). In both groups, heart rate remained stable and blood pressure decreased significantly during induction. Haemodynamic parameters remained stable during anaesthetic maintenance; no cardiac dysrhythmias were observed. Emergence time with sevoflurane was 12.9 min vs. 16.3 min with halothane, but this difference was not statistically significant. It is concluded that sevoflurane is as suitable for paediatric patients as halothane. The slightly faster emergence time offered by sevoflurane over halothane was of no clinical significance in the present study.

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