Sevoflurane versus  Halothane: Postoperative Maladaptive Behavioral Changes

Author:

Kain Zeev N.1,Caldwell-Andrews Alison A.2,Weinberg Megan E.3,Mayes Linda C.4,Wang Shu-Ming5,Gaal Dorothy5,Saadat Haleh5,Maranets Inna5

Affiliation:

1. Executive Vice-Chair and Professor of Anesthesiology, Pediatrics, and Child Psychiatry, Departments of Anesthesiology, Pediatrics, and Child Psychiatry.

2. Associate Research Scientist.

3. Research Assistant, Departments of Pediatrics and Child Psychiatry.

4. Arnold Gesell Professor of Child Psychiatry, Pediatrics, and Psychology, Department of Anesthesiology.

5. Assistant Professor of Anesthesiology, Department of Anesthesiology.

Abstract

Background The authors conducted a double-blind, randomized, controlled trial to determine whether the use of sevoflurane in children undergoing anesthesia and surgery results in a higher incidence of postoperative maladaptive behavioral changes as compared with halothane. Methods Children and their parents (n = 102) were randomly assigned to either a halothane group (n = 50) or a sevoflurane group (n = 52). The intraoperative anesthetic protocol was strictly controlled, and the postoperative analgesic consumption and pain levels were recorded. The effect of the group assignment on emergence status and maladaptive postoperative behavioral changes was assessed both by validated psychological measures and physiologic instruments (actigraphy) on postoperative days 1-7. Anxiety of the parent and child was also assessed, as was the child's postoperative recovery (Recovery Inventory). Results There were no group differences in preoperative state anxiety, postoperative analgesic requirements, postoperative pain, or the incidence of emergence delirium (P = not significant). Two-way repeated-measures analysis of variance showed no group differences in the incidence of postoperative maladaptive behaviors (F4,72 = 0.60, P = 0.701) or actigraphic variables such as percent sleep, number of night awakenings, and night awakenings that lasted for more than 5 min (P = not significant). Conclusion The authors found no increased incidence of emergence delirium, maladaptive postoperative behavior changes, or sleep disturbances in children undergoing anesthesia with sevoflurane as compared with halothane.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference33 articles.

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