Preoperative Melatonin and Its Effects on Induction and Emergence in Children Undergoing Anesthesia and Surgery

Author:

Kain Zeev N.1,MacLaren Jill E.2,Herrmann Leslie3,Mayes Linda4,Rosenbaum Abraham5,Hata Justin5,Lerman Jerrold6

Affiliation:

1. Chair, Professor, and Associate Dean of Clinical Research, Departments of Anesthesiology, Pediatrics, and Psychiatry and Human Behavior University of California, Irvine, Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital of Orange County, and Department of Child Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine.

2. Associate Project Scientist.

3. Medical Student, Brown School of Medicine.

4. Arnold Gesell Professor, Department of Child Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine.

5. Assistant Professor, Department of Anesthesiology, University of California, Irvine.

6. Clinical Professor and Staff Anesthesiologist, Departments of Anesthesiology, State University of New York at Buffalo and University of Rochester, and Strong Memorial Hospital, Rochester.

Abstract

Background Studies conducted in adults undergoing surgery reported a beneficial effect of oral melatonin administered before surgery. There is a paucity of such data in children undergoing anesthesia and surgery. Methods Children undergoing surgery were randomly assigned to receive preoperatively oral midazolam 0.5 mg/kg or oral melatonin 0.05 mg/kg, 0.2 mg/kg, or 0.4 mg/kg. The primary outcome of the study was preoperative anxiety (Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale). The secondary outcomes were the children's compliance with induction (Induction Compliance Checklist), emergence behavior (Keegan scale), and parental anxiety (State-Trait Anxiety Inventory). Results Repeated measures ANOVA showed that children who received melatonin at any of the three doses were more anxious compared with children who received midazolam (P < 0.001). Parental anxiety did not differ on the basis of the experimental condition (P = ns). The melatonin groups showed a dose-response effect on emergence behavior. Children who received melatonin developed less emergence delirium compared with those who received midazolam (P < 0.05), and the effect was dose related; the incidence after 0.05 mg/kg melatonin was 25.0%, incidence after 0.2 mg/kg melatonin was 8.3%, and incidence after 0.4 mg/kg melatonin was 5.4%. Conclusions Midazolam is more effective than melatonin in reducing children's anxiety at induction of anesthesia. Melatonin showed a direct dose-dependent effect on emergence delirium.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

Reference34 articles.

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