Intra-operative patient-controlled sedation and patient attitude to control. A crossover comparison of patient preference for patient-controlled propofol and propofol by continuous infusion.


     Related Videos
Patient Management and Operative Errors in Oral Surgery
Intra-Canal Instruments
  • Intra-Canal Instruments

  • An introduction to four intra-canal instruments: K-files, reamers, Hedstrom files, and barbed broach...

Operative laparoscopy
A Guide for Self-Evaluation - Preclinical and Clinical Operative Dentistry
Operative Video - Fixator Assisted HTO - Part 3

     Related Hubpages

    •  Doc. Url:    Embed Code: 

    • PubMed  status
      (0) (0 Votes)
      Views: (8)   Date: (1994-4-1)   Pages: ()
    • Author:  P I Leppard  

    • Abstract:  Intra-operative patient controlled sedation with propofol (bolus dose 18 mg over 5.4 s; lockout period 1 min) has been compared to continuous propofol infusion (3.6 mg.kg-1.h-1) in a randomised crossover study of 38 ASA 1 or 2 day surgery patients undergoing two-stage bilateral extraction of third molar teeth under local anaesthesia (76 procedures). Mean (SD) propofol used (mg.kg-1) was less with patient-controlled sedation (2.39 (1.28) than with the infusion (2.58 (0.84)) but the difference was not statistically significant. There were only minor differences between the methods in postoperative recovery of cognitive function and no differences for patient cooperation and surgeon's satisfaction with sedation. Patient-controlled sedation was preferred by 19 patients, continuous infusion by 10, with nine indifferent. Preferences, expressed as mild, moderate or strong, were significantly stronger for patient-controlled sedation (p < 0.05). Sedation was no deeper than eyelid closure with response to command in all 76 procedures. This level was reached in all 38 infusion cases but in only 26 cases with patient-controlled sedation, where 12 patients remained less sedated (p < 0.01). Patient-controlled sedation with propofol provided safe sedation and was strongly preferred over the infusion by a large proportion of patients.

         Related Documents

           Related Groups

             Related Science News

               More on Sciencestage

               Answers

               News

               Related on Wikipedia




























           

          Powered free by PHPmotion