• Critical care medicine · Jun 1992

    Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial

    Reversal of midazolam sedation with flumazenil.

    • F X Breheny.
    • Intensive Care Unit, Fremantle Hospital, Australia.
    • Crit. Care Med. 1992 Jun 1;20(6):736-9.

    ObjectiveTo demonstrate the efficacy of flumazenil in reversing the sedative action of midazolam in ventilated intensive care patients.DesignProspective, double-blind randomized study.SettingICU of a tertiary, university-affiliated teaching hospital.PatientsThirty ICU patients requiring artificial ventilation for greater than 12 hrs were studied.InterventionsAll patients received a midazolam infusion for sedation. Twenty-nine patients received supplementary narcotics. At the end of the sedation period, either flumazenil or placebo was administered to all the patients in a double-blind, randomized fashion, and the effects were observed.Measurements And Main ResultsSedation levels were measured hourly during the infusion; at the end of the infusion; and at 5, 15, 30, 60, and 120 mins after cessation of the midazolam infusion. Midazolam concentrations in serum were measured at the time of cessation of the midazolam infusion and at 30, 60, and 120 mins later. Reversal of sedation was observed in 14 of 15 patients who received flumazenil, and resedation occurred in seven of these patients. Reversal was not seen in any of the patients who received placebo. Midazolam serum concentrations were similar in both groups.ConclusionFlumazenil in a dose of 0.15 mg is a safe drug that reverses the sedative effect of midazolam.

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