Current drug targets
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Ketamine is a non-competitive antagonist to the phencyclidine site of N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor for glutamate, though its effects are mediated by interaction with many others receptors. It has been introduced in clinical use since 1960's but today it is not largely employed as a general anaesthetic for its undesired psychic effects (emergence reactions) occurring in approximately 12% of patients. ⋯ At present, non-definitive conclusion can be drawn. More data are needed to define the possible long term effects and the clinical goal of ketamine use.
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Using a portable infusion pump, intravenous opioid patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) permits a patient to self-deliver a small bolus of opioid to achieve prompt relief without over sedation. Use of PCA for pain management is increasing in hospitals, largely because it can provide equivalent or better analgesia than conventional nurse-administered opioid analgesia, and patients are more satisfied with its use. There is no decisive pharmacological or clinical argument for the choice of one opioid rather than another. ⋯ Caution is required among patients with respiratory or renal insufficiency. In the future, the indispensable improvement in the management of postoperative pain should lead to a greater expansion of PCA. However, more pharmaco-economic evaluations will be needed on the cost-effectiveness issue.
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In critically ill patients, adequate sedation increases comfort, minimizes stress response and facilitates diagnostic and therapeutic procedures. Propofol (2-, 6-diisopropylphenol) is an intravenous sedative-hypnotic agent popular for sedation in the Intensive Care Unit. The favorable propofol pharmacokinetic, characterized by a three compartment linear model, allows rapid onset and short duration of action. ⋯ Hypertriglyceridemia and pancreatitis are uncommon complications. A large number of trials have compared the use of propofol with midazolam. Sedation with propofol is associated with adequate sedation in ICU patients, shorter weaning time and earlier tracheal extubation compared to midazolam, but not before ICU discharge.
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The aim of the present article is to review the indications, the monitoring and the complications of sedation in the post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU). In this setting, sedation is often an unwanted side effect of anaesthetic drugs that delay discharge, however it could be specifically indicated. Such indications include postoperative anxiety and agitation, airway management and mechanical ventilation, protection against myocardial ischaemia and intracranial hypertension control. ⋯ The target score of the most common clinical scales has been reviewed according to the specific indication. An adequate monitoring is fundamental to avoid the complications of sedation including bradycardia, hypotension, prolonged mechanical ventilation and increased risk of respiratory tract infection as pointed out by many recent data. Therefore, sedation should be used carefully and with an adequate monitoring in post-operative patients not to affect negatively morbidity and mortality.
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Many patients in the ICU receive mechanical ventilation and require sedative medications. Anxiolysis, hypnosis, and amnesia can be considered the primary objects of sedative therapy. Intravenous benzodiazepines are the drugs most commonly used for sedation in ICU. ⋯ Diazepam has become less used with the introduction of the shorter-acting and less irritating benzodiazepine. The recent literature focuses on the differences between Midazolam and Propofol, the most used sedatives in ICU, their sequential use and combination. Relevant studies have been performed about propylene glycol toxicity.