确定小儿镇静患者出院后的事件。

Pediatric dentistry Pub Date : 2025-03-15
Meghan Thorburn, Deniz Dishman, Aaron Glick, Katherine Pazmiño, Brett Chiquet
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摘要

目的:确定中度镇静后父母报告的出院后事件(PDEs)的发生率,确定镇静方案和导致PDEs的患者特异性因素。方法:筛选小儿镇静患者病历2000份。从患者记录中收集的信息包括患者体重指数(BMI)、气道评估、睡眠呼吸障碍(SDB)症状史、镇静药物和剂量以及父母报告的术后信息。结果:家长提供出院后信息1079份,回复率54%。35.2%的患者报告了PDEs,其中行为问题(19.5%)和牙齿并发症(17.6%)报告最多。总体而言,美国麻醉医师学会(ASA) I级患者的PDEs发生率高于ASA II级患者(P0.05)。患者年龄、ASA分级、身高、BMI、Brodsky评分、镇静途径对PDEs的影响基于不同镇静方案和特异性PDEs。结论:行为和牙齿问题是最常见的父母报告出院后事件,发生率不依赖于镇静方案。PDEs的发生率随着体重指数的增加而增加,这加强了肥胖患者不应该在牙科诊所使用镇静剂的建议,即使剂量与他们的瘦体重相当。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Identifying Post-Discharge Events in Pediatric Sedation Patients.

Purpose: To identify the incidence of parental-reported post-discharge events (PDEs) following moderate sedation and determine the sedation regimen and patient-specific factors that contribute to PDEs. Methods: Two thousand patient charts of pediatric patients who underwent sedation were screened. Information gathered from the patient record included patient body mass index (BMI), airway assessment, history of sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) symptoms, sedation medications and dosages, and parentally reported post-operative information. Results: Parents provided post-discharge information for 1,079 records (54 percent response rate). PDEs were reported for 35.2 percent of patients, with behavior issues (19.5 percent) and dental complications (17.6 percent) reported the most. Overall, more PDEs occurred in American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) I patients compared to ASA II patients (P<0.001) and increased as BMI increased (P=0.003) and tonsillar obstruction decreased (P=0.02). Comparing sedation regimens showed no difference in the proportion of PDEs (overall or by category; P>0.05). Patient age, ASA classification, height, BMI, Brodsky score, and sedation route influenced PDEs based on different sedation regimens and specific PDEs. Conclusions: Behavioral and dental issues are the most commonly parental-reported post-discharge events, and the rate of occurrence did not depend on the sedation regimen. The incidence of PDEs increased as body mass index increased, reinforcing the recommendation that obese patients should not sedated in the dental office, even if dosed to their lean body weight.

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