• Arch Pediatr · Sep 2014

    Multicenter Study Comparative Study Observational Study

    [Implementation of a specific premedication protocol for tracheal intubation in the delivery room. Practice in two level-III hospitals].

    • E Walter-Nicolet, C Zanichelli, S Coquery, and P Cimerman.
    • Service de néonatologie, hôpital Saint-Joseph, 185, rue Raymond-Losserand, 75014 Paris, France; Service de néonatologie, hôpital Trousseau, AP-HP, 26, avenue Arnold-Netter, 75012 Paris, France. Electronic address: ewalter@hpsj.fr.
    • Arch Pediatr. 2014 Sep 1; 21 (9): 961-7.

    UnlabelledTracheal intubation in neonates is a painful procedure performed daily in the delivery room despite the widespread development of noninvasive ventilation. Specific analgesia is not commonly performed. The objective of this observational study was to compare practices between two level-III centers: one with a specific protocol for premedication before tracheal intubation of newborns in the delivery room, the other without.ResultsOne hundred and fifteen neonates were intubated in the delivery room and included over a 4-month period: 25% of them received specific premedication before intubation, exclusively in the center with the protocol. None of the extreme premature neonates (age≤28 gestational weeks) received analgosedation before the procedure. Nalbuphine, midazolam, and sufentanil were mainly used, via the intravenous or intrarectal route. Infants receiving a premedication were significantly heavier and had a greater gestational age than the others (1500 g [range, 1180-2260 g] vs. 1170 [range, 860-1680 g] P=0.003, and 31 GW [range, 29-34 GW] vs. 29 [range, 27-32 GW] P=0.014, respectively). Most pediatricians (85-100%) favored a specific protocol for sedation before tracheal intubation. Implementation of a specific protocol allows specific analgesia to be implemented for newborns undergoing tracheal intubation. Further studies should be conducted to determine the best strategies for pain management during tracheal intubation of neonates, especially in the delivery room.Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Masson SAS. All rights reserved.

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