IntroductionâPreoperative stress and anxiety in pediatric patients are associated with poor compliance during induction of anesthesia and a higher incidence of postoperative maladaptive behaviors. The aim of our study was to determine which preoperative preparation strategy improves compliance of the child during induction and decreases the incidence and intensity of emergence delirium (ED) in children undergoing ambulatory pediatric surgery.
Materials and MethodsâThis prospective observational study included 638 pediatric American Society of Anesthesiologists IâII patients who underwent ambulatory pediatric surgery, grouped into four preoperative preparation groups: NADA (not premedicated), MDZ (premedicated with midazolam), PPIA (parental presence during induction of anesthesia), and PPIAâ+âMDZ. The results were subsequently analyzed in four age subgroups: Group 1 (0â12 months), Group 2 (13â60 months), Group 3 (61â96 months), and Group 4 (> 96 months). Preoperative anxiety (modified Yale Preoperative Anxiety Scale [m-YPAS]), compliance of the child during induction (Induction Compliance Checklist [ICC]), and ED (Pediatric Anesthesia Emergence Delirium scale) were analyzed in each group.
ResultsâEighty-one percent of patients in the PPIAâ+âMDZ preparation group presented a perfect compliance during the induction of anesthesia (ICCâ=â0), less preoperative anxiety (mean score m-YPASâ=â26), less probability of ED (odds ratio: 10, 5 [3â37.5]; pâ