Loading…

Analgesia for circumcision in a paediatric population: comparison of caudal bupivacaine alone with bupivacaine plus two doses of clonidine

Background: Clonidine is often used to improve the duration and quality of analgesia produced by caudal epidural blockade, although the optimum dose of clonidine with bupivacaine remains uncertain. Methods: We compared the effect of clonidine, 1 and 2 μg·kg–1, added to bupivacaine (1.25 mg·kg–1) wit...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Pediatric anesthesia 2001-11, Vol.11 (6), p.695-700
Main Authors: Sharpe, P., Klein, J.R., Thompson, J.P., Rushman, S.C., Sherwin, J., Wandless, J.G., Fell, D.
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Background: Clonidine is often used to improve the duration and quality of analgesia produced by caudal epidural blockade, although the optimum dose of clonidine with bupivacaine remains uncertain. Methods: We compared the effect of clonidine, 1 and 2 μg·kg–1, added to bupivacaine (1.25 mg·kg–1) with that of bupivacaine alone in 75 male children undergoing elective circumcision. Results: There was a trend towards increasing duration of analgesia with increasing dose of clonidine [group B (bupivacaine) 280.7 (171.6) min, C1 (bupivacaine + clonidine 1 μg·kg–1) 327.8 (188.3) min and C2 (bupivacaine + clonidine 2 μg·kg–1) 382.0 (200.6) min], although this difference was not statistically significant. Mean time to arousal from anaesthesia was significantly prolonged with clonidine 2 μg kg–1 (group C2 21.3 (13–36) min, group C1 14.0 (6–25) min and group B 14.4 (2–32) min. Supplementary analgesic requirements and incidence of adverse effects were low, with no differences between the groups. Conclusions: For paediatric circumcision, under general anaesthesia, the addition of clonidine 2 μg·kg–1 to low volume (0.5 ml·kg–1) caudal anaesthetics has a limited clinical benefit for children undergoing circumcision.
ISSN:1155-5645
1460-9592
DOI:10.1046/j.1460-9592.2001.00748.x