• Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2000

    Cardiovascular criteria for epidural test dosing in sevoflurane- and halothane-anesthetized children.

    • S A Kozek-Langenecker, P Marhofer, K Jonas, T Macik, G Urak, and M Semsroth.
    • Departments of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care B, University of Vienna, School of Medicine, Vienna, Austria.
    • Anesth. Analg. 2000 Mar 1;90(3):579-83.

    UnlabelledThis study was designed to determine the detectability of a simulated IV test dose in children during administration of general anesthesia by using heart rate (HR), systolic blood pressure (SBP), and T wave criterion. Forty-two children (0.5-8 yr old) received an IV injection containing epinephrine 0.5 microg/kg and another IV injection containing saline during either halothane or sevoflurane anesthesia administration at 1.0 minimum alveolar concentration in nitrous oxide. A positive test response was defined as a change in T wave amplitude >/=25%, SBP increase >/=15 mm Hg, and HR increase >/=10 bpm. By using the T wave, SBP, and HR criteria, a positive response rate to epinephrine was 100%, 95%, and 71%, respectively, during sevoflurane, and 90%, 71%, and 71%, respectively, during halothane anesthesia administration. These data suggest that the T wave criterion is superior to conventional hemodynamic criteria, and that sevoflurane attenuates T wave and SBP responses less than halothane; however, chronotropic responses are similar to halothane.ImplicationsWe found a greater reliability of the T wave criterion over conventional hemodynamic criteria for detecting intravascular injection of a simulated epidural test dose. Sevoflurane may increase the likelihood of recognition of an accidental intravascular injection of epinephrine-containing solutions in clinical practice compared with halothane.

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