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World J Gastroenterol. Jan 28, 2013; 19(4): 463-481
Published online Jan 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i4.463
Published online Jan 28, 2013. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v19.i4.463
Table 1 Percentage of sedation use in different countries
Country | Sedation | Propofol use | Benzodia-zepines alone use | Benzodiaze-pines plus opioids use | No. of nurses present during endoscopy | Pulse oximetry use | Supplemental oxygen use |
Canada | 90% | 12% | always | 1 | |||
Italy | 42.30% for ERCP (by anaesthesiologists) | 50.80% | 39.50% | 100% | By 39.3% of endoscopists | ||
Greece | EGD: 64%; Colonoscopy: 78%; ERCP: 100%; EUS: 100% | 33.80% (in selected cases and only by anaesthesiologists) | 35.30% | 62.10% | 96% | ||
United States | 98% | 25.70% | 74.30% | 98.60% | By 72.7% of endoscopists (in all EGDs) | ||
Switzerland | 78% | 43% (regular use with or without the help of an anaesthesiologist) | Midazolam for the majority of endoscopies | 1 | 95% | ||
Spain | EGD: 20%; Colonoscopy: 20%; ERCP: 100%; EGD: 74% | Only by anaesthesiologists | Only for EFD | Only for colonoscopies | 1 | 77% | |
Germany | Colonoscopy: 87% | 74% | 82% | 35% | 97% | 34% |
Table 2 Characteristics of the pharmacological agents used to achieve a moderate level of sedation in gastrointestinal endoscopy (i.v. administration)1
Agent | Chemical structure | Molecular weight (g/moL) | Onset of action (min) | Duration of action | Elimination half-life | Metabolism/excretion |
Midazolam | C18H13ClFN3 | 325.78 | 1.0-2.5 | 2-6 h | 1.8-6.4 h | Hepatic and intestinal; excreted in urine |
Propofol | C12H18O | 178.27 | < 1 | 3-10 min | Triphasic: 2.2 min, 20 min, 8 h | Hepatic; excreted in urine |
Fentanyl | C22H28N2O | 336.471 | ≤ 1.5 | 1-2 h | 2-7 h | Hepatic; excreted in urine |
Meperidine | C15H21NO2 | 247.33 | 5 | 2-4 h | 2-7 h | Hepatic; excreted in urine |
Table 3 Currently used drugs for sedation and drugs under investigation
Drugs currently used for sedation | Drugs and other practices under investigation |
Midazolam | Nitrous oxide gas (N2O) |
Fentanyl | Remimazolam |
Propofol | Fospropofol |
Dexmedetomidine | |
Alfentanyl | |
Remifentanil | |
Music |
Table 4 Main adverse events related to sedation occurring during endoscopy in clinical trials
Ref. | Drug regimen | Percentage of side effects | Severe hypotension (< 60 mmHg) | Severe desaturation (< 90%) |
Ljubicić et al[98] | Propofol | 17.3% (including bradycardia: 11.8%) | 5.5% | |
Conigliaro et al[95] | Midazolam | 0.47% | ||
Gasparović et al[28] | Propofol | 2.9% | 0.5% | 2.4% |
Sharma et al[97] | Cardiopulmonary events | EGD: 0.6%; Colonoscopy: 1.1%;ERCP: 2.1%; EUS: 0.9% | ||
Nayar et al[96] | Propofol deep sedation vs moderate sedation | 0.6% vs 1.0% | 0.1% | 0.1% (apnoea: 0.3%) |
Correia et al[69] | Midazolam plus propofol vs midazolam plus fentanyl | 14% vs 7.3% | ||
Amornyotin et al[87] | Diluted vs undiluted propofol for deep sedation | 18.2% vs 42.9% | 11.4% vs 31.0% | 0 vs 2.4% |
Wang et al[32] | Midazolam vs midazolam combined with either fentanyl or propofol | Midazolam combined with propofol resulted in hypotension and bradycardia more significantly than a combination with fentanyl or midazolam alone |
Table 5 Side effects related to the administration of drugs used for sedation in gastrointestinal endoscopy
Side effect | Midazolam | Propofol | Fentanyl |
Hypotension | Yes | Yes | |
Hypertension | Yes | ||
Heart rate alterations | Arrhythmia | Decrease | Arrhythmia |
Respiratorydepression | Yes | Yes | Yes (particularly in the elderly) |
Apnoea | Yes (in combination with fentanyl) | Yes | Yes (in combination with Midazolam) |
Dystonia | Yes | Yes | |
Priapism | Yes | Yes (very rarely) | |
Pain on injection | Yes | ||
Lactic acidosis | Yes | ||
Intraocular pressure changes | Decrease | ||
Myoclonic movements | Yes | ||
Nervous system side effects | Yes (especially in the elderly) | Rare | Yes |
Unusual dreams | Yes | ||
Hypersensitivity | Yes | Yes | Yes (rarely) |
Liver damage | Yes | ||
Amnesia | Yes | ||
Impairment of cognitive functions - inability to drive safely | Yes | ||
Paradoxical behaviour | Yes | Yes | |
Gastrointestinal effects (nausea, vomiting, hiccups, diarrhoea) | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Sexual disinhibition | Yes | ||
Potential for abuse | Yes | ||
Haemolysis | Yes (slow injection rates and/or mixture in isotonic fluid) |
- Citation: Triantafillidis JK, Merikas E, Nikolakis D, Papalois AE. Sedation in gastrointestinal endoscopy: Current issues. World J Gastroenterol 2013; 19(4): 463-481
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v19/i4/463.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v19.i4.463