Moderate Sedation Flashcards
1
Q
What is the 1st major class of moderate sedation agents?
A
Benzodiazepines
2
Q
What is the MOA of benzodiazepines?
A
Bind to specific receptor sites in the CNS particularly in the cerebral cortex. Through this action, excitatory impulses are inhibiited
3
Q
What are the characteristics of benzodiazepines?
A
- Lipid soluble
- Readily penetrate the blood-brain barrier
- Use to achieve the following effects:
a. anxiolytics
b. sedation
c. hypnosis
d. anti-convulsion
e. skeletal muscle relaxation
4
Q
Pharmacokinetics of benzo?
A
Hepatic metabolism and renal excretion
5
Q
What are the cautions of benzodiazepines?
A
COPD, OSA, cardiopulmonary depression
6
Q
What are the guidelines for Midazolam (Versed)?
A
- Reduce doses in elderly, hypovolemic, high-risk patients and with concomitant use of other sedatives or narcotics.
- COPD patients are unusually sensitive to the respiratory depressant effect.
- Contraindicated in acute narrow-angle or open-angle glaucoma unless patients are receiving appropriate therapy.
- Do not administer a rapid bolus.
- Treat OD w/ supportive measures and reverse with FLUMAZENIL (0.2-1 mg, slowly IVP)
7
Q
What are the principle adverse reactions?
A
- CV: tachycardia, vasovagal episode, PVCs, hypotension
- Pulmonary: bronchospasm, laryngospasm, apnea, hypoventilation.
- CNS: euphoria, emergence delirium, prolonged emergence, tonic-clonic movements, agitation, hyperactivity.
- GI: salivation, retching, acid taste
- Dermatologic: rash, pruritis, warmth, or coldness at injection site.