Analgesia/anaesthesia Flashcards

1
Q

Ketamine dosing

A

0.5 - 2mg/kg IV for induction
2-4mg/kg IM for analgesia
5-10mg/kg IM for sedation

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2
Q

ketamine side effects

A

N/V 15%
Hypersalivation
Laryngospasm
Emergence phenomenon
Hallucination/nightmares
Resp depression/hypoxia/apnoea

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3
Q

Midazolam dosing

A

IM 0.1-0.2 mg/kg, usual max 5mg

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4
Q

Midazolam side effects

A

Hypotension
Apnoea, resp depression, hypoxia
Paradoxical hyper stimulation
Ongoing drowsiness

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5
Q

How does a childs larynx differ from an adults?

A

Relatively higher and anterior larynx

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6
Q

How does an infants head affect their airway?

A

Their relatively larger head tends to flex their short neck leading to narrowing and obstruction

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7
Q

What is the narrowest part of an infants airway?

A

The cricoid ring

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8
Q

How are oropharyngeal airways sized in infants?

A

Measure from the incisors to the angle of the jaw

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9
Q

How is the sniffing position achieved?

A

Flex the base of the neck (brings head forward) and extend the atlatnoaxial joint (head looks up)

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10
Q

How do you size a mask in a child or infant?

A

Should go over the bridge of the nose and just under the lower lip

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11
Q

How do you size an ETT in a young child >1yr?

A

Uncuffed = (age/4) + 4

Cuffed = (age/4) + 3.5

So a 2yo would have a size 4.5 uncuffed tube or a size 4 cuffed tube

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12
Q

How do you size an ETT for a child <1yr?

A

1 year and under only uncuffed

1yo size 4.5
6 months size 4.0
Neonate <3kg size 3.0 to 3.5

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13
Q

How do you estimate length of tube at the lips?

A

Length (cm) = (age/2) + 12

2yo = 2/2 + 12 = 13cm

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14
Q

What is the dosing of intranasal fentanyl?

A

1.5mcg/kg 1st dose

Repeat doses 0.75-1.5mcg/kg titrated to effect

IN fentanyl only used for children >1yr of age

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15
Q

What is the RSI dosing for Suxamethonium in children?

A

1.5-2mg/kg IV

Risk of bradycardia in children, much higher risk with 2nd dose
Consider the use of atropine as pre-treatment

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16
Q

What is the dose of Rocuronium for RSI in children?

A

1.2 - 1.6mg/kg IV

17
Q

How is Sucrose used as analgesia?

A
  • Used in age group 0-18months
  • Provide the dose 2mins prior to a painful procedure
  • Max 5ml/day <3months and max 10ml/day >3months
  • 0.1 - 0.5ml increments
18
Q

When is Ibuprofen used as analgesia in paeds?

A
  • > 3months of age
  • 10mg/kg PO, max 30mg/kg/day
19
Q

What is the dosing of Oxycodone in paediatrics?

A
  • > 1month old
  • 0.1mg/kg PO
20
Q

How should anaesthesia be given for a paediatrics patient requiring a minor procedure ie suturing

A
21
Q

What are the potential indications for nitrous oxide in paediatrics?

A

Diagnostic
- LP or SPA
- Urinary IDC insertion
- PIVC insertion or blood drawing

Therapeutic
- Suturing
- Foreign body removal
- Simple fracture manipulation
- Simple burns dressings
- Incision and drainage of abscess
- Local anaesthetic injection

22
Q

What are the contraindications to nitrous oxide in paediatrics? What are the potential complications?

A

Absolute
- Airway or breathing compromise (ie severe asthma)
- Expansion of gas filled airspaces (PTx, recent craniectomy, SBO, air embolus, decompression illness, middle ear disease, surgery with air trapping, obstructive airways disease)
- Pulmonary hypertension severe enough to cause reduced exercise tolerance (worsens pHTN)
- GCS <15 from head injury
- Procedure >30mins
- Very painful procedure
- Certain metabolic disorders (homocystinuria etc

Relative
- Increased risk of airway compromise (obstruction, known difficult airway, URTI)
- Lower risk expansion of gas filled spaces
- Head injury but GCS 15
- Age <6month
- Must be able to generate enough negative pressure (if using on demand entonox 50:50)
- Increased risk of bone marrow suppression (poor nutrition, severe illness, severe infection, extensive tissue damage)

Side effects/Complications
- N/V
- Dizziness, agitation
- Aspiration, airway obstruction
- Diffusion hypoxia
- Hallucinations
- Sedation failure
- Rare (bone marrow suppression, neurotoxicity, increased homocysteine level)