Assessment of Common Criteria for Awake Extubation in Infants and Young Children
- PMID: 31343462
- PMCID: PMC6768741
- DOI: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002870
Assessment of Common Criteria for Awake Extubation in Infants and Young Children
Abstract
Background: Practice patterns surrounding awake extubation of pediatric surgical patients remain largely undocumented. This study assessed the value of commonly used predictors of fitness for extubation to determine which were most salient in predicting successful extubation following emergence from general anesthesia with a volatile anesthetic in young children.
Methods: This prospective, observational study was performed in 600 children from 0 to 7 yr of age. The presence or absence of nine commonly used extubation criteria in children were recorded at the time of extubation including: facial grimace, eye opening, low end-tidal anesthetic concentration, spontaneous tidal volume greater than 5 ml/kg, conjugate gaze, purposeful movement, movement other than coughing, laryngeal stimulation test, and oxygen saturation. Extubations were graded as Successful, Intervention Required, or Major Intervention Required using a standard set of criteria. The Intervention Required and Major Intervention Required outcomes were combined as a single outcome for analysis of predictors of success.
Results: Successful extubation occurred in 92.7% (556 of 600) of cases. Facial grimace odds ratio, 1.93 (95% CI, 1.03 to 3.60; P = 0.039), purposeful movement odds ratio, 2.42 (95% CI, 1.14 to 5.12; P = 0.022), conjugate gaze odds ratio, 2.10 (95% CI, 1.14 to 4.01; P = 0.031), eye opening odds ratio, 4.44 (95% CI, 1.06 to 18.64; P= 0.042), and tidal volume greater than 5 ml/kg odds ratio, 2.66 (95% CI, 1.21 to 5.86; P = 0.015) were univariately associated with the Successful group. A stepwise increase in any one, in any order, of these five predictors being present, from one out of five and up to five out of five yielded an increasing positive predictive value for successful extubation of 88.3% (95% CI, 82.4 to 94.3), 88.4% (95% CI, 83.5 to 93.3), 96.3% (95% CI, 93.4 to 99.2), 97.4% (95% CI, 94.4 to 100), and 100% (95% CI, 90 to 100).
Conclusions: Conjugate gaze, facial grimace, eye opening, purposeful movement, and tidal volume greater than 5 ml/kg were each individually associated with extubation success in pediatric surgical patients after volatile anesthetic. Further, the use of a multifactorial approach using these predictors, may lead to a more rational and robust approach to successful awake extubation.
Conflict of interest statement
Conflict of Interest: The authors declare no competing interests.
Comment in
-
Adding Science to the Decision to Extubate Children.Anesthesiology. 2019 Oct;131(4):769-770. doi: 10.1097/ALN.0000000000002921. Anesthesiology. 2019. PMID: 31389819 No abstract available.
References
-
- Mamie C, Habre W, Delhumeau C, Argiroffo CB, Morabia A: Incidence and risk factors of perioperative respiratory adverse events in children undergoing elective surgery. Paediatr Anaesth 2004; 14:218–24 - PubMed
-
- Mc Donnell C: Interventions guided by analysis of quality indicators decrease the frequency of laryngospasm during pediatric anesthesia. Paediatr Anaesth 2013; 23:579–87 - PubMed
-
- Murat I, Constant I, Maud’huy H: Perioperative anaesthetic morbidity in children: a database of 24,165 anaesthetics over a 30-month period. Paediatr Anaesth 2004; 14:158–66 - PubMed
-
- Templeton TW, Templeton LB, Goenaga-Diaz EJ, Bryan YF: Laryngeal stimulation: an early objective test for timing extubation in young children. Paediatr Anaesth 2016; 26:1027–8 - PubMed
-
- Gurnaney HG, Cook-Sather SD, Shaked A, Olthoff KM, Rand EB, Lingappan AM, Rehman MA: Extubation in the operating room after pediatric liver transplant: A retrospective cohort study. Paediatr Anaesth 2018; 28:174–8 - PubMed
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Medical