Morphine kinetics in children
Child; Female; Male; Pain; Analgesia; Preschool; infant; Anesthesia; Human; Adolescence; Operative; Surgical Procedures; Kinetics; Morphine/administration & dosage/blood/metabolism; Preanesthetic Medication
The kinetics of morphine in the plasma of children (0 to 15 yr) can in most cases be adequately described by a triexponential function. When the dosage in children receiving morphine as premedication before surgery is based on kilograms of body weight, there are only minor differences in the kinetic patterns of morphine at different ages (0 to 1, 1 to 7, and 7 to 15 yr). No significant difference in the morphine kinetics was observed between patients (7 to 15 yr) receiving the drug only as premedication and those who also received doses during surgery. The minimum morphine concentration in plasma necessary to suppress the clinical signs of pain during surgery was found to be 65 ng/ml (95% confidence limits of 46 to 83 ng/ml). Based on these minimum effective plasma levels of morphine, there does not seem to be any difference between children of different ages in their sensitivity to morphine. No difference was found in the minimum effective level of morphine when clinical signs of pain were observed by different anesthesiologists.
1979
Dahlstrom B; Bolme P; Feychting H; Noack G; Paalzow L
Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics
1979
Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
Journal Article
Clinical validation of the paediatric pain profile
Child; Female; Humans; Male; Sensitivity and Specificity; Analgesia; Reproducibility of Results; Communication Disorders; adolescent; Preschool; Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support; infant; Q3 Literature Search; Nervous System Diseases/complications; disabled children; Pain Measurement/methods; Operative; Surgical Procedures
The Paediatric Pain Profile (PPP) is a 20-item behaviour rating scale designed to assess pain in children with severe neurological disability. We assessed the validity and reliability of the scale in 140 children (76 females, mean age 9 years 11 months, SD 4 years 7 months; range 1 to 18 years), unable to communicate through speech or augmentative communication. Parents used the PPP to rate retrospectively their child's behaviour when 'at their best' and when in pain. To assess interrater reliability, two raters concurrently observed and individually rated each child's behaviour. To assess construct validity and responsiveness of the scale, behaviour of 41 children was rated before and for four hours after administration of an 'as required' analgesic. Behaviour of 30 children was rated before surgery and for five days after. Children had significantly higher scores when reported to have pain than 'at their best' and scores increased in line with global evaluations of pain. Internal consistency ranged from 0.75 to 0.89 (Cronbach's alpha) and interrater reliability from 0.74 to 0.89 (intraclass correlation). Sensitivity (1.00) and specificity (0.91) were optimized at a cut-off of 14/60. PPP score was significantly greater before administration of the analgesic than after (paired-sample t-tests, p<0.001). Though there was no significant difference in mean pre- and postoperative scores, highest PPP score occurred in the first 24 hours after surgery in 14 (47%) children. Results suggest that the PPP is reliable and valid and has potential for use both clinically and in intervention research.
2004
Hunt A; Goldman A; Seers K; Crichton N; Mastroyannopoulou K; Moffat V; Oulton K; Brady M
Developmental Medicine And Child Neurology
2004
Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).
Journal Article
<a href="http://doi.org/10.1017/s0012162204000039" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">10.1017/s0012162204000039</a>