Paediatric anaesthesia
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2025
Review Meta AnalysisPerioperative intravenous lignocaine for pediatric postoperative pain-A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Intravenous lignocaine has been used as an analgesic adjunct in pediatric surgical patients, although its efficacy is still unclear. ⋯ There is low quality evidence to suggest that perioperative intravenous lignocaine bolus followed by an infusion significantly reduced the opioid consumption on the first postoperative day in pediatric surgical patients. The effects of perioperative lignocaine on postoperative pain scores and the need for rescue analgesia are uncertain.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2025
ReviewCommon error traps in anesthesia for neonatal surgical emergencies.
Neonatal surgical emergencies are challenging, often high-risk procedures for the pediatric anesthesiologist. Though each emergency presents different anesthetic challenges, several error traps exist that are common to all procedures in this patient population. These error traps include errors in surgical timing, airway management, maintenance of normothermia and normoglycemia, and recognition of pharmacologic and physiologic differences. In this narrative review, we will discuss each error trap to aid the clinician in recognizing, planning for, and mitigating adverse events.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2025
Trauma-induced coagulopathy across age pediatric groups: A retrospective cohort study evaluating testing and frequency.
Trauma-induced coagulopathy (TIC) is associated with negative outcomes. Pediatric TIC has been described most often in older children. Children undergo normal developmental hemostasis, but it is unknown how this process impacts the risk of TIC across childhood. ⋯ Significant sampling bias exists in clinical data collection among injured children and adolescents. Contrary to previous reports and using age-specific TIC criteria, younger children are not at lower risk of TIC than older children when controlling for injury severity.