Capnography With Integrated Pulmonary Index for Preventing Hypoxemia During Pediatric Urologic Surgery Under Sedation: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
Researchers
YiRu Wang, Huan Liu, Mei Yang, XinYu Hu, LiuYang Yu, Hang Guo
Abstract
BACKGROUND Procedural sedation and analgesia (PSA) can relieve pain and anxiety during invasive procedures. Carbon dioxide (CO₂) monitoring or integrated pulmonary index (IPI) can reduce respiratory depression in adults with PSA, but the effect of the combination of these 2 methods on intraoperative hypoxemia in pediatric urologic surgery is unclear. This study was conducted to determine whether capnography combined with IPI could lessen intraoperative hypoxemia during pediatric urinary procedures with PSA. MATERIAL AND METHODS We conducted a randomized controlled trial (ChiCTR 2300073943). Children referred for urinary procedures with PSA were randomly assigned to either a control group with standard monitoring or an intervention group with standard monitoring combined with capnography and IPI monitoring. The primary outcome was intraoperative hypoxemia. Secondary outcomes were severe intraoperative hypoxemia, airway management, and perioperative complications. RESULTS A total of 133 patients completed the analysis (67 in the intervention group and 66 in the control group). Compared with the control group, the incidence of intraoperative oxygen saturation decline was significantly lower in the intervention group (34.33% vs 56.06%, odds ratio=0.410, 95% confidence interval: 0.203-0.825, P=0.012). Simultaneously, the incidence of severe oxygen desaturation (SpO₂ <90%) was also significantly reduced in the intervention group (19.40% vs 36.40%, odds ratio=0.421, 95% confidence interval: 0.192-0.925, P=0.034). Regarding airway management interventions, the intervention group exhibited a higher frequency of jaw thrust maneuvers (1.84±1.31 vs 1.17±1.12 times, P=0.004) and a significantly reduced need for invasive positive-pressure ventilation (1.64±1.31 vs 2.39±1.48, P=0.002). No differences in other airway management techniques or perioperative complications were observed between the 2 groups. CONCLUSIONS The addition of capnography and IPI monitoring to standard monitoring reduces the risk of intraoperative hypoxemia in pediatric urologic surgery and reduces the need for aggressive ventilation through early intervention.Source: PubMed (PMID: 42104601)View Original on PubMed