Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0600097 (Sedation)
1,337 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to evaluate prehospital sedation protocols used by several French mobile intensive care units for difficult intubations in poisoned patients. This prospective, descriptive study was performed within the toxicological intensive care unit in a university hospital. Consecutive poisoned patients intubated during their airway management by prehospital medical teams were included. Intubating physicians completed a one-page checklist concerning the circumstances of endotracheal intubation. Intubation difficulty was significantly related to the nature of sedation protocols. The use of etomidate alone as an intubation sedative agent was associated with significantly poorer intubating conditions (47.2% difficult) than other sedative agents or neuromuscular blockade). Neuromuscular blockade with sedation in our series was associated with the lowest incidence of difficult intubations in poisoned patients. Sedation alone for intubation appears to be inadequate to achieve good intubating conditions in a significant proportion of patients.
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PMID:A survey of sedation protocols used for emergency endotracheal intubation in poisoned patients in the French prehospital medical system. 991 45

Sedation and analgesia will be required in the mechanically ventilated pediatric trauma patient. Adequate provision of both has a number of beneficial physiologic and psychologic effects. There are a number of categories of sedatives available for use. To provide optimal management and avoid adverse sequellae, an understanding of the pharmacology of these agents should guide their use in this group of patients, who are likely to have variable pharmacokinetic responses and therapeutic goals. Neuromuscular blockade is warranted in only a select population of mechanically ventilated ICU patients. Given newer ventilator technology and modes, it is certainly possible to achieve patient-ventilator synchrony with the use of sedation alone. Neuromuscular blockade is associated with a number of possible adverse effects, including prolonged weakness or paresis, and prohibits ongoing clinical assessment. When the use of this therapy is deemed necessary, it is again essential to understand the pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics of the available agents to avoid potential complications.
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PMID:Paralyzation and sedation of the ventilated trauma patient. 1158 7