Anesthetic Combination Offers Rapid Recovery

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The ideal sedative for oral surgery should make the patient comfortable during the surgery and should wear off quickly enough that the patient can leave the dental chair soon after the procedure. Finding the best plan of anesthetic treatment is essential to the success of dental procedures such as the extraction of wisdom teeth. A double-blinded study compared 2 drug combinations for use as deep sedation during oral surgery. Patients in a control group received a continuous intravenous infusion of propofol-remifentanil, while the patients in an experimental group received a continuous intravenous infusion of propofol-ketamine. The study involved 37 patients who were monitored while sedated for respiratory, heart rate, and blood pressure stability. Emergence from the effects of anesthesia and total recovery time were recorded. Both patients and surgeons were asked to rate their satisfaction with the anesthetic treatments. Patients who received the ketamine treatment took longer to emerge from the effects of the anesthesia. Their average emergence time was 13.6 minutes compared with 7.1 minutes for patients in the remifentanil group. The recovery period for ketamine patients was 42.9 minutes compared with 24.5 minutes for those who received remifentanil. Both groups showed similar levels of sedation. However, an increase in heart rate was noted among patients receiving the ketamine treatment. Both patients and surgeons indicated they were very satisfied with either treatment. While ketamine provides a more cost-effective alternative for dental sedation—remifentanil is more expensive—it requires a longer patient recovery time. This study found that the more rapid recovery from the propofol-remifentanil combination makes it a more ideal deep sedative for dental office third molar surgery.


(Source: Anesthesia Progress, 2012, Volume 59, Number 3)