Procedural Sedation And Analgesia Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA)

A

Administration of sedative or dissociative agents with or without analgesics to induce a state that allows the patient to tolerate unpleasant procedures while maintains cardiorespiratory function

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2
Q

What does procedural sedation and analgesia result in?

A
  1. Depressed level of consciousness
  2. Maintain oxygenation and independent airway control
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3
Q

What is required for procedural sedation?

A

Monitoring
*patients may or may not remember the procedure depends on type of medication used, dosages, patients physiology

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4
Q

What is monitored anesthesia care (MAC) or local anesthesia with standby

A

Sedation and analgesia can be provided as needed
*ideal for patients in frail health
*can convert to general anesthesia
*”standby” is the anesthesia provider monitoring the patient while the procedure is performed under local / regional anesthesia

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5
Q

What are indications to complete procedural sedation?

A
  1. Alleviate anxiety
  2. Minimize physical pain and discomfort
  3. Minimi se negative physiological repsonse to treatment
  4. Maximize amnesia
  5. Control behavior to expedite performance of procedures
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6
Q

What are CI of procedural sedation

A
  1. allergies
  2. Last meal
    *food within <6 hours
    *fluids within <2 hours
  3. Commodities
    *inability to intubate or manually ventilate
  4. ASA classification
    *Class IV or V
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7
Q

What are CI of procedural sedation relating to airway exam

A
  1. Inability to open mouth >3cm
  2. Thyromental distance <6cm
  3. Mallampati classification
    *based on size of tongue and the visibility of pharyngeal structures
  4. ROM of cervical spine
  5. Presence of a beard
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8
Q

What is class I of Mallampati

A

Soft palate, anterior and posterior Tonsillar pillar, uvula are visible

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9
Q

What is class II of Mallampati

A

Tonsillar pillars and part of the uvula obscured by the tongue

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10
Q

What is class III of Mallampati

A

Only soft and hard palate visible

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11
Q

What is class IV of Mallampati

A

Only the hard palpate is visible

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12
Q

What to monitor and document for procedural sedation and analgesia

A

Document mental status before and after procedure
Document ADE
Always have supplemental O2, ACLS meds, reversals agents
1. Cardiac monitor
2. Pulse oximetry
3. Blood pressure
4. End-tidal CO2 (ETCO2) = normal 35-4mmHG

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13
Q

What are the ideal procedural sedation and analgesia agents

A

Provide rapid onset, maximal comfort, quick resolution, minimal after effects
1. Analgesia - narcotics
2. Amnesia - sedative (benzo)
3. Dissociative provides analgesic, amnestied, and sedative effects

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14
Q

What is fentanyl and what is the dosage, onset, and duration

A

Strong synthetic opiate, Analgesic (no amnestic properties)
Dosage: 0.5-2ug/kg IV over 2 mins
Onset: 1-2 min
Duration: 30-60 mins

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15
Q

What are the AE and reversal agent of fentanyl

A

Reversal agent: Naloxone
AE: bradycardia, hypotension, increased intracranial pressure, chest wall rigidity (large doses)

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16
Q

What is morphine and what is the dosage, onset, and duration

A

Strong opiate, analgesic (no amnesiac properties)
Dosage: 3-4mg over 2 minutes
Onset: 2-5 mins
Peak: 20 mins
Duration: 4-5 hours

17
Q

What is the reversal agent and AE of morphine

A

Reversal agent: Naloxone
AE: respiratory depression, hypotension possible

18
Q

What is midazolam (versed) and what is the dosage, onset, and duration

A

Benzo, sedation, anxiolytic, amnestic (no analgesia)
Onset: 1-3 mins
Peak: 3-5mins
Duration: 20-60 mins

19
Q

What is the reversal agent and AE of Midazolam (versed)

A

Reversal agent: flumazenil (romazicon)
*caution if on chronic benzo can cause refractory seizures
AE: respiratory depression, HTN, prolonged sedation possible in elderly