• Paediatric anaesthesia · Jun 2013

    Randomized Controlled Trial

    Phenylephrine as a simulated intravascular epidural test dose in pediatrics: a pilot study.

    • Carlo Pancaro, Viviane G Nasr, Jessica K Paulus, Iwona Bonney, Alejandro F Flores, Jonas B Galper, and Iqbal Ahmed.
    • Department of Anesthesiology, Tufts University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02111, USA. carlopancaro@hotmail.com
    • Paediatr Anaesth. 2013 Jun 1;23(6):502-9.

    BackgroundA test dose is used to detect intravascular injection during neuraxial block in pediatrics. Accidental intravascular epidural local anesthetic injection might be unrecognized in anesthetized children leading to potential life-threatening complications. In children, sevoflurane anesthesia blunts the hemodynamic response when intravascular cathecolamines are administered. No studies have explored the hemodynamics and the criteria for a positive test dose result following phenylephrine in sevoflurane anesthetized children.MethodsHealthy children undergoing minor procedures were randomly assigned to receive intravenous placebo, or 5 μg∙kg(-1) phenylephrine (n = 11/group) during sevoflurane anesthesia. Hemodynamic response was assessed using electrocardiography, pulse oxymetry and non-invasive blood pressure monitoring for 5 min following drug administration in anesthetized patients.ResultsAll patients receiving phenylephrine showed a decreased heart rate (HR) but not all of them met the positive criterion for test dose response. Overall, at 1 min, patients receiving phenylephrine showed a 25% decrease in HR from the baseline while an increase in blood pressure was noticed in 54% of patients receiving phenylephrine.DiscussionPhenylephrine might be a future indicator of positive intravascular test dose. Further investigation is needed to find out the phenylephrine dose that elicits a reliable hemodynamic response and whether phenylephrine needs to be dose age-adjusted in order to appreciate relevant hemodynamic changes in children receiving neuraxial blocks undergoing general anesthesia.© 2013 Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

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