Procedural Sedation and Analgesia
Cross-source consensus on Procedural Sedation and Analgesia from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
Uses
How it works
Risks & contraindications
Comparisons
Highlighted claims
- Procedural sedation and analgesia is defined as the administration of one or more pharmacological agents to reduce patient anxiety and discomfort during diagnostic and therapeutic procedures while preserving key physiological functions. — Comparison of remimazolam versus propofol under deep sedation for elderly patients during prostate biopsy: a protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- PSA requires preservation of airway patency, spontaneous respiration, protective airway reflexes, and haemodynamic stability. — Comparison of remimazolam versus propofol under deep sedation for elderly patients during prostate biopsy: a protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- Deep sedation in elderly patients carries a substantially elevated risk of respiratory depression compared with younger adults. — Comparison of remimazolam versus propofol under deep sedation for elderly patients during prostate biopsy: a protocol for a randomised controlled trial
- The prior ERCP comparative study targeted lighter sedation (MOAA/S score of 1–2) rather than the deep sedation (MOAA/S score of 0) targeted in the present trial. — Comparison of remimazolam versus propofol under deep sedation for elderly patients during prostate biopsy: a protocol for a randomised controlled trial