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      Anesthesia-related mortality in pediatric patients: a systematic review

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          Abstract

          This systematic review of the Brazilian and worldwide literature aimed to evaluate the incidence and causes of perioperative and anesthesia-related mortality in pediatric patients. Studies were identified by searching EMBASE (1951-2011), PubMed (1966-2011), LILACS (1986-2011), and SciElo (1995-2011). Each paper was revised to identify the author(s), the data source, the time period, the number of patients, the time of death, and the perioperative and anesthesia-related mortality rates. Twenty trials were assessed. Studies from Brazil and developed countries worldwide documented similar total anesthesia-related mortality rates (<1 death per 10,000 anesthetics) and declines in anesthesia-related mortality rates in the past decade. Higher anesthesia-related mortality rates (2.4-3.3 per 10,000 anesthetics) were found in studies from developing countries over the same time period. Interestingly, pediatric perioperative mortality rates have increased over the past decade, and the rates are higher in Brazil (9.8 per 10,000 anesthetics) and other developing countries (10.7-15.9 per 10,000 anesthetics) compared with developed countries (0.41-6.8 per 10,000 anesthetics), with the exception of Australia (13.4 per 10,000 anesthetics). The major risk factors are being newborn or less than 1 year old, ASA III or worse physical status, and undergoing emergency surgery, general anesthesia, or cardiac surgery. The main causes of mortality were problems with airway management and cardiocirculatory events. Our systematic review of the literature shows that the pediatric anesthesia-related mortality rates in Brazil and in developed countries are similar, whereas the pediatric perioperative mortality rates are higher in Brazil compared with developed countries. Most cases of anesthesia-related mortality are associated with airway and cardiocirculatory events. The data regarding anesthesia-related and perioperative mortality rates may be useful in developing prevention strategies.

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          Most cited references116

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          Anesthesia-related cardiac arrest in children: update from the Pediatric Perioperative Cardiac Arrest Registry.

          The initial findings from the Pediatric Perioperative Cardiac Arrest (POCA) Registry (1994-1997) revealed that medication-related causes, often cardiovascular depression from halothane, were the most common. Changes in pediatric anesthesia practice may have altered the causes of cardiac arrest in anesthetized children. Nearly 80 North American institutions that provide anesthesia for children voluntarily enrolled in the Pediatric Perioperative Cardiac Arrest Registry. A standardized data form for each perioperative cardiac arrest in children
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            Perioperative anaesthetic morbidity in children: a database of 24,165 anaesthetics over a 30-month period.

            This study reports the practices and morbidity of 24,165 anaesthetics performed over a 30-month period in a paediatric teaching hospital. Data describing practices and adverse events during anaesthesia and in the postanaesthesia care unit (PACU) were collected prospectively from 1 January 2000 to 30 June 2002 on an audit form as a part of the Quality Assurance Program. All surgical specialties are covered except for open heart surgery and neurosurgery. A total of 724 adverse events were reported during anaesthesia and 1105 in PACU. Respiratory events represented 53% of all intraoperative events. They were more frequent in infants compared with older children, in ENT surgery compared with other surgery, in children in whom the trachea was intubated and in children with ASA status 3-5 compared with those with ASA score 1 or 2. Cardiac events accounted for 12.5% of intraoperative events and were mainly observed in children with ASA score 3-5. In PACU, vomiting was the most frequent adverse event with an overall incidence of 6%. Vomiting was more frequent in older children compared with infants and young children and more frequent after ENT surgery compared with other surgery. Only one death was reported in a premature newborn infant and was not anaesthesia-related. This observational study confirms previous reports, and indicates that there is still a relative higher rate of adverse events in infants compared with older children even in a teaching paediatric hospital with a high annual caseload.
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              The pharmacology of sevoflurane in infants and children.

              Sevoflurane is a new volatile anesthetic with physical properties that should make it suitable for anesthesia (MAC of sevoflurane on oxygen alone and in 60% nitrous oxide, (MAC) of sevoflurane in oxygen alone and in 60% nitrous oxide, the hemodynamic, induction and emergence responses to sevoflurane and the metabolism to inorganic fluoride were studied in 90 ASA physical status 1 or 2 neonates, infants, and children. MAC of sevoflurane in oxygen was determined in six groups of subjects stratified according to age: full-term neonates, infants 1-6 and > 6-12 months and children > 1-3, > 3-5 and > 5-12 yr. MAC in 60% nitrous oxide was determined in a separate group of children 1-3 yr of age. After an inhalational induction, the trachea was intubated (except for neonates in whom an awake intubation was performed). MAC for each age group was determined using the Up-and-Down technique of Dixon. MAC of sevoflurane in neonates, 3.3 +/- 0.2% and in infants 1-6 months of age, 3.2 +/- 0.1%, were similar; MAC in older infants 6-12 months and children 1-12 yr was constant at approximately 2.5%; MAC of sevoflurane in 60% nitrous oxide in children 1-3 yr of age was 2.0 +/- 0.2%. Systolic arterial pressure decreased significantly at 1 MAC before skin incision compared with awake values in all subjects except children 1-3 yr with 60% nitrous oxide and children 5-12 yr in oxygen, and then returned toward awake values after skin incision. Heart rate was unchanged at approximately 1 MAC sevoflurane before incision compared with awake values in all subjects except children > 3-5 and > 5-12 yr in whom heart rate increased before incision. Induction of anesthesia, particularly with respect to airway irritability, and emergence from sevoflurane anesthesia were not remarkable. The plasma concentration of inorganic fluoride reached maximum values (8.8-16.7 microM) 30 min after discontinuation of anesthesia. We conclude that sevoflurane appears to be a suitable anesthetic agent for use in neonates, infants and children undergoing < or = 1 h of anesthesia.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Clinics (Sao Paulo)
                Clinics (Sao Paulo)
                Clinics
                Hospital das Clínicas da Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de São Paulo
                1807-5932
                1980-5322
                April 2012
                : 67
                : 4
                : 381-387
                Affiliations
                [I ]Universidade do Estado do Amazonas (UEA), Manaus/AM, Brazil.
                [II ]Universidade Estadual Paulista, Botucatu Medical School (UNESP), Department of Anesthesiology, Botucatu/SP, Brazil.
                Author notes

                Gonzalez LP and Braz JRC were responsible for the study design, the data analysis, and manuscript writing. Pignaton W, Kusano PS, and Módolo NSP were responsible for the data analysis and the approval of the final version of manuscript. Braz LG was responsible for the study design, data analysis, manuscript writing, and archiving of the study files.

                E-mail: lbraz@ 123456fmb.unesp.br Tel.: 55 14 3811-6222
                Article
                cln_67p381
                10.6061/clinics/2012(04)12
                3317253
                22522764
                06fec3c2-a42a-4526-b499-5c8b1b64d593
                Copyright © 2012 Hospital das Clínicas da FMUSP

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 23 September 2011
                : 10 October 2011
                : 5 December 2011
                Page count
                Pages: 7
                Categories
                Review

                Medicine
                review,pediatric,anesthesia,perioperative,mortality,cardiac arrest
                Medicine
                review, pediatric, anesthesia, perioperative, mortality, cardiac arrest

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