Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children

Objectives: To determine 1) Success rate of using fresh gas flow (FGF) 1 l.min-1compared to 2 l.min-1in pediatric patients 2) Necessity of using anesthetic agent analyzer 3) predicting volatile anesthetic concentration 4) cost difference Method: Seventy-seven patients (age 10 days to 8 years) who un...

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Main Authors: Suwannee Suraseranivongse, Sumitra Chowvanayotin, Sangsom Pirayavaraporn, Songyos Valairucha, Naiyana Arunpruksakul, Somsak Areewatana
Other Authors: Mahidol University
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Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21492
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spelling th-mahidol.214922018-07-24T10:46:56Z Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children Suwannee Suraseranivongse Sumitra Chowvanayotin Sangsom Pirayavaraporn Songyos Valairucha Naiyana Arunpruksakul Somsak Areewatana Mahidol University Medicine Objectives: To determine 1) Success rate of using fresh gas flow (FGF) 1 l.min-1compared to 2 l.min-1in pediatric patients 2) Necessity of using anesthetic agent analyzer 3) predicting volatile anesthetic concentration 4) cost difference Method: Seventy-seven patients (age 10 days to 8 years) who underwent general anesthesia were randomly allocated into 2 groups: the control group (FGF 2 l.min-1) and the study group (FGF 1 l.min-1). Outcome measures included system leakage, SaO2, PECO2, FiO2, Fi and FeN2O, isoflurane dial setting, Fi and Fe isoflurane, isoflurane mass consumed and sodalime used. Results: There was no difference between the groups regarding demographic data, duration of surgery and anesthesia. Success rate in using FGF 2 l.min-1was 100% and FGF 1 l.min-1was 92%. All failure cases (8%) were due to system leakage. The necessity of using a capnometer was similar at 5.3-7.7% in both groups. FiO2was ≥ 0.3 at any time. FiN2O and FeN2O were not different. Fi isoflurane was 13-15% lower than dial setting. Overall savings from using FGF 1 l/min was 37.8%. Conclusion: FGF1 l.min-1could be safely used in most pediatric patients with lower cost. Capnometer was recommended, whereas FiO2and Fi isoflurane could be clinically adjusted. 2018-07-24T03:46:56Z 2018-07-24T03:46:56Z 2004-11-01 Article Journal of the Medical Association of Thailand. Vol.87, No.11 (2004), 1343-1348 01252208 2-s2.0-13744252829 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21492 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=13744252829&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Suwannee Suraseranivongse
Sumitra Chowvanayotin
Sangsom Pirayavaraporn
Songyos Valairucha
Naiyana Arunpruksakul
Somsak Areewatana
Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
description Objectives: To determine 1) Success rate of using fresh gas flow (FGF) 1 l.min-1compared to 2 l.min-1in pediatric patients 2) Necessity of using anesthetic agent analyzer 3) predicting volatile anesthetic concentration 4) cost difference Method: Seventy-seven patients (age 10 days to 8 years) who underwent general anesthesia were randomly allocated into 2 groups: the control group (FGF 2 l.min-1) and the study group (FGF 1 l.min-1). Outcome measures included system leakage, SaO2, PECO2, FiO2, Fi and FeN2O, isoflurane dial setting, Fi and Fe isoflurane, isoflurane mass consumed and sodalime used. Results: There was no difference between the groups regarding demographic data, duration of surgery and anesthesia. Success rate in using FGF 2 l.min-1was 100% and FGF 1 l.min-1was 92%. All failure cases (8%) were due to system leakage. The necessity of using a capnometer was similar at 5.3-7.7% in both groups. FiO2was ≥ 0.3 at any time. FiN2O and FeN2O were not different. Fi isoflurane was 13-15% lower than dial setting. Overall savings from using FGF 1 l/min was 37.8%. Conclusion: FGF1 l.min-1could be safely used in most pediatric patients with lower cost. Capnometer was recommended, whereas FiO2and Fi isoflurane could be clinically adjusted.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Suwannee Suraseranivongse
Sumitra Chowvanayotin
Sangsom Pirayavaraporn
Songyos Valairucha
Naiyana Arunpruksakul
Somsak Areewatana
format Article
author Suwannee Suraseranivongse
Sumitra Chowvanayotin
Sangsom Pirayavaraporn
Songyos Valairucha
Naiyana Arunpruksakul
Somsak Areewatana
author_sort Suwannee Suraseranivongse
title Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
title_short Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
title_full Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
title_fullStr Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 L.Min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
title_sort comparison of effectiveness between gas flow 1 and 2 l.min<sup>-1</sup>for general anesthesia in infants and children
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/21492
_version_ 1763491514127745024