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The optimal dose of oral midazolam with or without intranasal S-ketamine for premedication in children: a randomised, double blinded, sequential dose-finding trial

Authors :
Yong Bian
Tao Xu
Huiyan Hou
Yue Huang
Siyi Zhou
Source :
Transl Pediatr
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Oral administration of midazolam syrup is one of the most favorable methods of premedication, the optimal dose of midazolam and midazolam with S-ketamine for preschool children has not been determined. This prospective, double-blind, randomized, sequential dose-finding study was designed to estimate the 90% effective doses of oral midazolam with and without intranasal S-ketamine in a grade III child medical center. METHODS: Eighty successive children were recruited and randomly allocated to midazolam group and midazolam with S-ketamine group. The initial oral doses of midazolam were 0.25 mg/kg in both groups, and the dose of midazolam for the next child was based on the response of the preceding child as the biased coin up-and-down designed. The primary outcome was parental separation anxiety score = 1 throughout the period of transferring from premedication center to the operation room 30 min after premedication. Secondary outcomes were the preoperative and post-operative observations. Finally, the 90% effective dose and 95% confidence intervals were estimated by isotonic regression. RESULTS: The 90% effective dose of oral midazolam or oral midazolam with intranasal S-ketamine was 0.461 mg/kg (95% confidence interval: 0.425–0.488) and 0.253 mg/kg (95% confidence interval: 0.242–0.278), respectively. Oral midazolam with intranasal S-ketamine was quicker onset (8.9±3.8 vs. 19.7±7.4 min, P

Details

ISSN :
22244344
Volume :
10
Issue :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Translational pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0c95635785f47f0d879185849c6e9c9