The effect of audiovisual distraction on patient-controlled sedation under spinal anesthesia: a prospective, randomized trial

被引:0
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作者
Adam W. Meier
Michael J. Buys
Manasa Gill
Eric W. Piacenza
Linda Nguyen
Chelsea M. Allen
Ami R. Stuart
Jeremy Gililland
Ken B. Johnson
机构
[1] University of Utah,Department of Anesthesiology
[2] University of Utah,Division of Epidemiology, Department of Internal Medicine
[3] University of Utah,Department of Orthopaedics
关键词
Technology; Clinical pharmacology; Regional anesthesia;
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摘要
Audiovisual distraction (AVD) has been used to augment or replace procedural sedation. We investigated whether AVD in patients having total hip (THA) or total knee arthroplasty (TKA) under spinal anesthesia would reduce self-administered propofol consumption during surgery. 50 participants were randomized equally into a patient-controlled sedation (PCS) group or AVD group. All participants were given a spinal block and a propofol PCS device prior to surgery. In addition, Group AVD participants selected and watched a movie or documentary film on a tablet device with noise-cancelling headphones during surgery. The primary outcome of this study was total propofol consumption standardized as mcg/kg/min. Secondary outcomes evaluated increased supplemental oxygen use, rescue airway interventions, hypotension, disruptive movement events during surgery, sedation, and satisfaction with anesthesia scores. Historical clinician-controlled propofol usage at our institution over the previous 2 years were recorded. There was no significant difference in median propofol consumption between Groups PCS and AVD, 8.4 mcg/kg/min (1.6–18.9) vs 4 mcg/kg/min (0–9) (P = 0.29), respectively. Historical clinician-controlled usage of propofol demonstrated a median of 39.3 mcg/kg/min (29.2–51.2). There were few differences in the secondary outcome measures. The use of AVD did not reduce patient-controlled propofol consumption in patients having a THA or TKA surgery under spinal anesthesia.
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页码:355 / 361
页数:6
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