• Anesthesiology · Jul 1998

    Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial

    A comparison of the respiratory effects of sevoflurane and halothane in infants and young children.

    • K Brown, C Aun, J Stocks, E Jackson, A Mackersie, and D Hatch.
    • Portex Anaesthesia, Intensive Therapy and Respiratory Medicine Unit, Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom.
    • Anesthesiology. 1998 Jul 1;89(1):86-92.

    BackgroundThis study compared the respiratory effects of sevoflurane with those of halothane in anesthetized infants and young children.MethodsInfants were randomized to receive 1 minimum alveolar concentration (MAC) halothane or sevoflurane in a mixture of nitrous oxide and oxygen. Anesthetic management included the use of a laryngeal mask. Flow, airway pressure, and the end-tidal carbon dioxide pressure (PETCO2) were measured during spontaneous ventilation and airway occlusions. Respiratory inductive plethysmography was used to assess chest wall motion.ResultsMeasurements were obtained in 30 infants and young children (mean (SD) age, 14.5 (5.9) months), 15 of whom received sevoflurane and 15 received halothane. Some respiratory depression, as indicated by a PETCO2 of 45 mmHg (6 kPa), was present in both groups. Minute ventilation and respiratory frequency were significantly lower during sevoflurane than halothane anesthesia (4.5 compared with 5.4 (1/ m2)/min, and 37.5 compared with 46.7 breaths/min, respectively, P < 0.05). There was no difference in respiratory drive, but the shape of the flow waveform differed according to anesthetic agent, with peak inspiratory flow reached later, and peak expiratory flow reached earlier, in the sevoflurane group. There was also significantly less thoracoabdominal asynchrony during sevoflurane anesthesia.ConclusionsMinute ventilation and respiratory frequency were lower in infants during 1 MAC sevoflurane in nitrous oxide than during halothane anesthesia. However, these differences may not be clinically relevant at these concentrations, given the modest increase in PETCO2. Differences in parameters of breath timing and shape between sevoflurane and halothane suggest different effects of these anesthetic agents on ventilatory control.

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