1.Sedation with dexmedetomidine in elderly patients during dental surgery: a retrospective case series
Mika SETO ; Ryosuke KITA ; Seiji KONDO
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons 2019;45(3):152-157
OBJECTIVES:
The number of elderly patients with systemic basal disease requiring invasive dental treatment has increased. Appropriate prediction of surgical invasiveness and combined use of psychosedation are thought to contribute to safe whole-body management. Dexmedetomidine (DEX) exhibits analgesic and anti-anxiolytic properties and causes mild respiratory depression. Studies regarding DEX use in elderly non-intubated patients are scarce. We aimed to use retrospective data to determine an effective dose of DEX to induce adequate sedation in elderly patients undergoing invasive dental surgery under local anesthesia.
MATERIALS AND METHODS:
One hundred two patients aged 70 to 96 years were presumably appropriately controlled with sedation. DEX was administered at an initial loading dose of 2.0 to 3.1 µg/kg/hr for 10 minutes. We divided the patients into five groups by age and compared their blood pressures and heart rates.
RESULTS:
In all five groups, blood pressure decreased suddenly at approximately 15 and 20 minutes after DEX administration. A marked decrease in blood pressure was noted in patients aged 75 to 79 years.
CONCLUSION
For elderly patients aged 75 years and above, the initial loading dose of DEX needs to be reduced to lower than half that required for young and middle-age adults.
2.Sedation with dexmedetomidine in elderly patients during dental surgery: a retrospective case series
Mika SETO ; Ryosuke KITA ; Seiji KONDO
Journal of the Korean Association of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons 2019;45(3):152-157
OBJECTIVES: The number of elderly patients with systemic basal disease requiring invasive dental treatment has increased. Appropriate prediction of surgical invasiveness and combined use of psychosedation are thought to contribute to safe whole-body management. Dexmedetomidine (DEX) exhibits analgesic and anti-anxiolytic properties and causes mild respiratory depression. Studies regarding DEX use in elderly non-intubated patients are scarce. We aimed to use retrospective data to determine an effective dose of DEX to induce adequate sedation in elderly patients undergoing invasive dental surgery under local anesthesia. MATERIALS AND METHODS: One hundred two patients aged 70 to 96 years were presumably appropriately controlled with sedation. DEX was administered at an initial loading dose of 2.0 to 3.1 µg/kg/hr for 10 minutes. We divided the patients into five groups by age and compared their blood pressures and heart rates. RESULTS: In all five groups, blood pressure decreased suddenly at approximately 15 and 20 minutes after DEX administration. A marked decrease in blood pressure was noted in patients aged 75 to 79 years. CONCLUSION: For elderly patients aged 75 years and above, the initial loading dose of DEX needs to be reduced to lower than half that required for young and middle-age adults.
Adult
;
Aged
;
Anesthesia, Local
;
Blood Group Antigens
;
Blood Pressure
;
Dexmedetomidine
;
Heart Rate
;
Humans
;
Respiratory Insufficiency
;
Retrospective Studies
3.Thrombolysis for Bileaflet Valve Thrombosis.
Nanritsu Matsuyama ; Kunio Asada ; Keiichiro Kondo ; Toshihiro Kodama ; Seiichiro Minohara ; Shigeto Hasegawa ; Yoshihide Sawada ; Junko Okamoto ; Seiji Kinugasa ; Ken Okamoto ; Shinjiro Sasaki
Japanese Journal of Cardiovascular Surgery 1999;28(1):39-43
Between January 1981 and December 1996, we performed valve replacement in 281 patients using bileaflet prosthetic valves in mitral and/or tricuspid positions. Thrombosed valve were seen in 10 patients (7 in mitral, 3 in tricuspid positions). In 5 patients, coumadin had been stopped for several reasons (pacemaker implantation, melena, drug allergy), but in the other 5 patients, anticoagulation was within the therapeutic range at the time of presentation. For thrombolytic therapy urokinase or tissue plasminogen activator were used. The treatment was successful in 5 patients (4 mitral, 1 tricuspid), and unsuccessful in 5 patients (3 mitral, 2 tricuspid). Three of the 5 unsuccessful patients were treated surgically (3 with re-mitral valve replacement, 1 with thrombectomy). Prompt surgical treatment can be used as the first line of therapy for thrombosed valves. Thrombolytic therapy may be useful in some cases of bileaflet valve thrombosis without critical hemodynamic collapse. Doppler echocardiographic assessment of increasing peak velocity and pressure half time is useful for detecting thrombosed valves.