The effects of brief sevoflurane-nitrous oxide anaesthesia upon children's postoperative cognition and behaviour

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Abstract

This study assessed the effects of brief sevoflurane-nitrous oxide anaesthesia on children's postoperative cognition, behaviour and physical morbidity. Forty-eight children aged 5-10 years undergoing anaesthesia without premedication for multiple dental extractions, and 48 control children, performed tests of choice reaction time, attention, psychomotor co-ordination and memory pre-operatively (baseline), prior to discharge and at 48 h (anaesthesia group only). Physical and psychological morbidity were recorded at 1 week. Mean choice reaction time and psychomotor co-ordination were significantly impaired postoperatively but had recovered at 48 h. However, measures of performance variability suggested the presence of residual impairment. Profound retrograde amnesia affected postoperative and 48-h recall of pictorial stimuli presented prior to anaesthesia, but recognition memory was unimpaired. Attention-seeking, tantrums, crying and nightmares were occurring more frequently in some 8-20% of children 1 week after the procedure. © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation 2006 The Association of Anaesthetists of Great Britain and Ireland.

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Millar, K., Asbury, A. J., Bowman, A. W., Hosey, M. T., Musiello, T., & Welbury, R. R. (2006). The effects of brief sevoflurane-nitrous oxide anaesthesia upon children’s postoperative cognition and behaviour. Anaesthesia, 61(6), 541–547. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2044.2006.04662.x

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