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Anesth Analg 1999;89:632
© 1999 International Anesthesia Research Society


PEDIATRIC ANESTHESIA

The Efficacy of a Simulated Intravascular Test Dose in Sevoflurane-Anesthetized Children: A Dose-Response Study

Makoto Tanaka, MD, and Toshiaki Nishikawa, MD

Department of Anesthesia, Akita University School of Medicine, Akita, Japan

Address correspondence and reprint requests to Makoto Tanaka, MD, Department of Anesthesia, Akita University School of Medicine, Hondo 1-1-1, Akita-shi, Akita-ken 010-8543, Japan. Address e-mail to mtanaka{at}med.akita-u.ac.jp

A recent study demonstrated that changes in both heart rate (HR; positive if >=10 bpm increase) and T-wave amplitude (positive if >=25% increase) reliably detect accidental intravascular injection when a full test dose containing epinephrine 0.5 µg/kg is injected intravascularly. We designed this study to prospectively determine whether a smaller dose of epinephrine would produce reliable HR and T-wave changes in sevoflurane-anesthetized children. We studied 80 ASA physical status I infants and children (6–72 mo) undergoing elective surgeries during 1.0 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration sevoflurane and 67% nitrous oxide in oxygen. After the administration of IV atropine 0.01 mg/kg, the patients were randomly assigned to receive either IV saline (n = 20), an IV test dose (0.1 mL/kg) consisting of 1% lidocaine with 1:200,000 epinephrine (epinephrine 0.5 µg/kg group,

n = 20), an IV test dose (0.05 mL/kg) (epinephrine 0.25 µg/kg group, n = 20), or an IV test dose (0.025 mL/kg) (epinephrine 0.125 µg/kg group, n = 20) via a peripheral vein to simulate the intravascular injection of the test dose. HR and systolic blood pressure were recorded every 20 and 30 s, respectively, and T-wave amplitude of lead II was continuously recorded for subsequent analysis. After the IV injection of the test dose, all children in the epinephrine 0.5 and 0.25 µg/kg groups developed positive responses based on the peak T-wave amplitude, whereas all children in the epinephrine 0.5 µg/kg group and 17 children (85%) in the epinephrine 0.25 µg/kg group elicited a positive response according to the peak HR criterion. No false-positive responses were observed with saline injections. Children in the epinephrine 0.125 µg/kg group showed clinically unacceptable efficacy based on either criterion. We conclude that the efficacies of detecting an intravascular injection of the test dose based on the hemodynamic and T-wave criteria are reduced with smaller doses of epinephrine and that HR and T-wave changes are still useful indicators in most patients if epinephrine 0.25 µg/kg is accidentally injected intravascularly.

Implications: To determine whether an epidurally administered local anesthetic has been unintentionally injected into a blood vessel, a small dose of epinephrine is often added to a local anesthetic. We found that an increase in T-wave amplitude >=25% in lead II and a heart rate increase >=10 bpm are useful indicators for detecting the accidental intravascular injection of a small dose of epinephrine in sevoflurane-anesthetized children.




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Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins Anesthesia & Analgesia® is published for the International Anesthesia Research Society® by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins with the assistance of Stanford University Libraries' HighWire Press®. Copyright 2006 by the International Anesthesia Research Society. Online ISSN: 1526-7598   Print ISSN: 0003-2999 HighWire Press
Copyright © 1999 by the International Anesthesia Research Society.