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Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution

BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in paediatric patients requires them to be calm during the procedure to avoid motion artefacts in the acquired images. Sedation and/or anaesthesia is a way to achieve this. We evaluated all paediatric MRI sedations since installation of an MRI device in o...

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Autores principales: Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa, Dorcas Omisore, Adeleye, Taiwo Adenekan, Anthony, Comfort Famurewa, Olusola, Oluwole Ayoola, Oluwagbemiga, Andrew Attah, Fredrick, Adebayo Adetiloye, Victor
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Termedia Publishing House 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5894049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662572
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/PJR.902419
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author Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa
Dorcas Omisore, Adeleye
Taiwo Adenekan, Anthony
Comfort Famurewa, Olusola
Oluwole Ayoola, Oluwagbemiga
Andrew Attah, Fredrick
Adebayo Adetiloye, Victor
author_facet Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa
Dorcas Omisore, Adeleye
Taiwo Adenekan, Anthony
Comfort Famurewa, Olusola
Oluwole Ayoola, Oluwagbemiga
Andrew Attah, Fredrick
Adebayo Adetiloye, Victor
author_sort Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in paediatric patients requires them to be calm during the procedure to avoid motion artefacts in the acquired images. Sedation and/or anaesthesia is a way to achieve this. We evaluated all paediatric MRI sedations since installation of an MRI device in our hospital. MATERIAL/METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed 69 paediatric MRI sedations performed over a 5-year period using records of patients’ biodata, MRI date, indication, findings and scan time, sources of referral, body region scanned, type, dose, related adverse events and route of administration of sedatives as well as image quality. RESULTS: The median age and weight of the patients were 24 months {range of 0.3 months (10 days) to 132 months (11 years)} and 11.5 kg (range of 2.6 kg to 42 kg), respectively. Males constituted 50.7% of the patients. Most participants (94.2%) were in-patients of the hospital, mainly (60.0%) referred from the paediatric unit, with slightly over one third (36.2%) of the studies performed in 2015. The commonest indication and scanned body region were macrocephaly (18.8%) and the brain (76.8%), respectively. Hydrocephalus (17.4%) was the commonest MRI finding. Sedation was planned in 66 (95.7%) patients and was successful in 68 (98.6%). Midazolam and the IV route were the commonest sedative agent and route of administration, respectively. Image quality determined by age was fair to good in 68 (98.6%) patients with only 1 patient requiring re-scanning due to motion blur. No adverse events with sedation were recorded. CONCLUSIONS: Midazolam via the IV route with or without oral route is the drug of choice for MRI sedation in children in our institution with a success rate of about 99%.
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spelling pubmed-58940492018-04-16 Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa Dorcas Omisore, Adeleye Taiwo Adenekan, Anthony Comfort Famurewa, Olusola Oluwole Ayoola, Oluwagbemiga Andrew Attah, Fredrick Adebayo Adetiloye, Victor Pol J Radiol Original Article BACKGROUND: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in paediatric patients requires them to be calm during the procedure to avoid motion artefacts in the acquired images. Sedation and/or anaesthesia is a way to achieve this. We evaluated all paediatric MRI sedations since installation of an MRI device in our hospital. MATERIAL/METHODS: We retrospectively reviewed 69 paediatric MRI sedations performed over a 5-year period using records of patients’ biodata, MRI date, indication, findings and scan time, sources of referral, body region scanned, type, dose, related adverse events and route of administration of sedatives as well as image quality. RESULTS: The median age and weight of the patients were 24 months {range of 0.3 months (10 days) to 132 months (11 years)} and 11.5 kg (range of 2.6 kg to 42 kg), respectively. Males constituted 50.7% of the patients. Most participants (94.2%) were in-patients of the hospital, mainly (60.0%) referred from the paediatric unit, with slightly over one third (36.2%) of the studies performed in 2015. The commonest indication and scanned body region were macrocephaly (18.8%) and the brain (76.8%), respectively. Hydrocephalus (17.4%) was the commonest MRI finding. Sedation was planned in 66 (95.7%) patients and was successful in 68 (98.6%). Midazolam and the IV route were the commonest sedative agent and route of administration, respectively. Image quality determined by age was fair to good in 68 (98.6%) patients with only 1 patient requiring re-scanning due to motion blur. No adverse events with sedation were recorded. CONCLUSIONS: Midazolam via the IV route with or without oral route is the drug of choice for MRI sedation in children in our institution with a success rate of about 99%. Termedia Publishing House 2017-08-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5894049/ /pubmed/29662572 http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/PJR.902419 Text en Copyright © Polish Medical Society of Radiology 2017 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0). License allowing third parties to download articles and share them with others as long as they credit the authors and the publisher, but without permission to change them in any way or use them commercially.
spellingShingle Original Article
Owojuyigbe, Afolabi Muyiwa
Dorcas Omisore, Adeleye
Taiwo Adenekan, Anthony
Comfort Famurewa, Olusola
Oluwole Ayoola, Oluwagbemiga
Andrew Attah, Fredrick
Adebayo Adetiloye, Victor
Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title_full Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title_fullStr Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title_full_unstemmed Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title_short Clinical Audit of Paediatric Magnetic Resonance Imaging Under Sedation at a Nigerian Tertiary Institution
title_sort clinical audit of paediatric magnetic resonance imaging under sedation at a nigerian tertiary institution
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5894049/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29662572
http://dx.doi.org/10.12659/PJR.902419
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