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HOME > J Yeungnam Med Sci > Volume 37(3); 2020 > Article
Review article
Drug selection for sedation and general anesthesia in children undergoing ambulatory magnetic resonance imaging
Sung Mee Jungorcid
Yeungnam University Journal of Medicine 2020;37(3):159-168.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.12701/yujm.2020.00171
Published online: April 17, 2020

Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Yeungnam University College of Medicine, Daegu, Korea

Corresponding author: Sung Mee Jung Department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, Yeungnam University College of Medicine, 170 Hyeonchung-ro, Nam-gu, Daegu 42415, Korea Tel: +82-53-620-3368 Fax: +82-53-625-5725 E-mail: applejsm@gmail.com
• Received: March 16, 2020   • Revised: March 29, 2020   • Accepted: April 6, 2020

Copyright © 2020 Yeungnam University College of Medicine

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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  • The demand for drug-induced sedation for magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans have substantially increased in response to increases in MRI utilization and growing interest in anxiety in children. Understanding the pharmacologic options for deep sedation and general anesthesia in an MRI environment is essential to achieve immobility for the successful completion of the procedure and ensure rapid and safe discharge of children undergoing ambulatory MRI. For painless diagnostic MRI, a single sedative/anesthetic agent without analgesia is safer than a combination of multiple sedatives. The traditional drugs, such as chloral hydrate, pentobarbital, midazolam, and ketamine, are still used due to the ease of administration despite low sedation success rate, prolonged recovery, and significant adverse events. Currently, dexmedetomidine, with respiratory drive preservation, and propofol, with high effectiveness and rapid recovery, are preferred for children undergoing ambulatory MRI. General anesthesia using propofol or sevoflurane can also provide predictable rapid time to readiness and scan times in infants or children with comorbidities. The selection of appropriate drugs as well as sufficient monitoring equipment are vital for effective and safe sedation and anesthesia for ambulatory pediatric MRI.
The prevalence of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for diagnosing and monitoring a wide range of disease in children continues to expand with the efficacy benefit of providing high-resolution images of tissue anatomy and quantitative function and the safety advantage of a lack of ionizing radiation [1,2]. Aspects of MRI scans such as loud noises, confined bore of the magnet, and the required immobility to prevent motion artifacts are the causes of anxiety and barriers to successful performance of the procedure in children younger than 6 years and those at any age with development delay, claustrophobia, or involuntary movements or convulsions. Given the increase in MRI utilization and growing interests in the pain and anxiety of children, the demand for drug-induced sedation during MRI scans have substantially increased over the past decade. Generally, pediatric MRI scans require deep sedation or general anesthesia to achieve absolute immobility (sometimes with breath-holding) for up to 1 hour (Table 1) [3-5].
The greater the level of sedation, the greater the risk for complications. In addition, it is common that the child easily progresses to a deeper level of sedation without easily recognizable signs. For these reasons, patients who require more than conscious sedation in an MRI suite must be provided with the same level of safety and monitoring (pulse oximetry, capnography, electrocardiogram, heart rate, and blood pressure at least 5 minutes interval by an independent observer) as in the operating room [6]. However, pediatric sedation in an MRI environment presents unique challenges that are not existent in the operating room. Powerful static and dynamic magnetic fields with radiofrequency pulses restrict the use of standard ferromagnetic anesthesia machines and monitoring equipment and limits access to the patients throughout the scanning process. Emergently halting MRI for patient safety takes several minutes to be effective and is expensive. In addition, adverse events including incoordination of movements, dizziness, and agitation occurs in 64.4% patients, and a return to baseline takes more than 9 hours after discharge in children undergoing MRI [4]. Thus, sedation providers should have an in-depth knowledge of drugs including a clear understanding of the sedating medication’s pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics, drug interactions, and potential complications, as well as the presence of appropriate monitoring equipment and personnel with the skills needed to rescue a patient from adverse events for safe and efficient sedation for pediatric MRI.
This article reviews currently used sedative/anesthetic agents for deep sedation or general anesthesia for ambulatory pediatric MRI. The benefits and risks of deep sedation and general anesthesia are also included. In this article, the most commonly used drugs in Korea will be highlighted.
Selecting sedation or general anesthesia for MRI should be made on an individual patient basis, considering the benefits and risks. The goals of sedation or anesthesia for ambulatory pediatric MRI are as follows: (1) to guard the patient’s safety and welfare; (2) to minimize physical discomfort and pain; (3) to control anxiety, minimize psychological trauma, and maximize the potential for amnesia; (4) to control movement to allow the safe and efficient completion of the procedure; and (5) to provide early, safe discharge from the hospital [6]. The ideal drug regimen to achieve these goals should have the following desirable characteristics: (1) rapid onset of action; (2) predictable duration; (3) easy titratability within the desired range of the sedation continuum; (4) rapid and consistent cessation of effects; (5) multiple delivery options; (6) a wide therapeutic window; (7) minimal cardiorespiratory depression; (8) minimal drug interaction; and (9) be minimally affected by renal or hepatic disease [7]. Generally, decisions regarding the drugs to be used for sedation depends on the patient-related (neurodevelopmental status, underlying health condition, and previous sedation/anesthesia history) and procedure-related factors (degree of cooperation/immobility required, invasiveness, and duration). A single sedative/hypnotic without an analgesic is preferred for obtaining immobility for nonpainful MRI procedures [3]. A combination of two or more sedating medications may have the potential for adverse outcomes [8,9].
1. Sedative/hypnotic agents

1) Chloral hydrate

Choral hydrate is a sedative hypnotic agent with no analgesic properties. It is believed that its sedative mechanism is mediated by the γ-aminobutyric acid type A (GABAA) receptor in the central nervous system. Chloral hydrate is well absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract via an oral or rectal route and rapidly metabolized into an active metabolite, trichloroethanol, which is responsible for its sedative and hypnotic effects. The onset of action is 30–60 minutes and the duration of action is 60–120 minutes. However, individual responses may be highly variable and sedative effects may last up to 24 hours. The half-life is age dependent and varies from 4 to 12 hours and may extend to 37 hours and 28 hours in preterm and term infants, respectively [10]. Thus, chloral hydrate has the potential for resedation after initial recovery from sedation and may produce residual effects up to 24 hours after administration.
Although it has little effect on the cardiovascular and respiratory systems, adverse events including nausea and vomiting, gastritis, diarrhea, prolonged sedation, paradoxical excitement, agitation, and minor respiratory depression should be considered. Children receiving chloral hydrate should be properly monitored and managed by appropriately trained personnel due to the risk of respiratory depression and desaturation especially in infants younger than 6 months [9,11]. It should be avoided in children with moderate to severe renal failure, severe hepatic dysfunction, hypersensitivity to chloral hydrate, gastritis, esophagitis, peptic ulcer, adenoid hypertrophy, and porphyria [12].
The recommended dose of chloral hydrate is 50–100 mg/kg (up to a maximum of 2 g) [13]. The success rate of chloral hydrate sedation for pediatric MRI varies from 78%–100% [14-19] and is affected by the total dose administered, age, fasting status, and neurodevelopmental disability [14,15,18,19]. When 100 mg/kg of chloral hydrate is administered, the sedation success rate was 96% in children under 48 months but decreased to 86% in those older than 48 months [20]. The United Kingdom (UK) National Institute for Clinical Excellence (NICE) also recommends the use of oral chloral hydrate with a wide margin of safety in children under 15 kg. In contrast, chloral hydrate can be used as a first-line sedative agent for MRI in newborns and infants with the lowest risk of cardiorespiratory adverse events compared to phenobarbital and propofol [17,21]. Although there are no clear guidelines for pre-procedural fasting for chloral hydrate, fasted children require a greater dose of chloral hydrate, which is related to a longer onset and duration of action. Thus, children may be encouraged to take at least clear fluids 2 hours before the procedure for successful sedation without breaking institutional fasting protocols for chloral hydrate sedation [22]. Choral hydrate should not be used in children with neurodevelopmental disorders due to the increased incidence of adverse effects and decreased efficacy as compared with neurologically intact children [18]. In contrast, it may be used safely and effectively in properly monitored children who have congenital heart disease, including those with cyanotic heart disease, for painless diagnostic procedures [23].
Currently, both the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and European Medicines Agency (EMA) have withdrawn the approval of chloral hydrate partly due to the potential risk of carcinogenicity. In conclusion, chloral hydrate seems to provide safe and effective sedation for children under 48 months old undergoing MRI. However, its use is progressively decreasing based on the high failure rate for MRI sedation, prolonged recovery time, and introduction of more effective sedative agents in many countries [24].

2) Pentobarbital

Pentobarbital is a medium duration barbiturate that provides potent sedation with no analgesic property. It can be administered via an oral or intravenous (IV) route. Following IV administration, the onset of action is 2–3 minutes, with peak effects after 10–15 minutes and a duration of action of 45–60 minutes due to rapid redistribution [25]. Following oral administration using an IV formulation of pentobarbital, sedation begins at 20–30 minutes and lasts 60–90 minutes [16,26,27]. The oral dose of 4–8 mg/kg and IV dose of 2–3 mg/kg (to a maximum 5–8 mg/kg) are required to achieve deep sedation. The sedation success rates of pentobarbital for MRI in children are 87.8%–99.5% for IV administration [16,17,26-28] and 67%–99.7% for oral administration [26,29-31] with a trend towards increasing failure rates with increasing age and weight. Retrospective comparison analysis found that oral pentobarbital has comparable sedation success rate (99.5% vs. 99.7%) and time to discharge and a lower rate of desaturation (0.2% vs. 0.9%) compared with IV pentobarbital in 2,164 infants undergoing CT or MRI [26]. Both oral and IV pentobarbital are as effective as oral chloral hydrate for providing sedation for pediatric MRI [16,29]. However, when compared to oral chloral hydrate, oral pentobarbital has the advantage of fewer respiratory events in infants, whereas IV pentobarbital has the disadvantage of a higher incidence of more paradoxical reaction and major motion artifacts and prolonged recovery despite the advantage of earlier onset in children. Children with neurodevelopmental disability have similar dose requirements for pentobarbital but more respiratory adverse events and hypoxemia during MRI scans [27,32,33].
Pentobarbital is associated with adverse reactions such as oxygen desaturation, nausea and vomiting, paradoxical hyperreactivity, respiratory depression, agitation, and prolonged sedation [16,17,26-29,31]. Airway obstruction is more likely to occur in infants. Oral pentobarbital results in a longer duration of action and less respiratory adverse events than IV administration [26]. Pentobarbital, like other barbiturates, is contraindicated in patients with porphyria.

3) Midazolam

Midazolam is a short-acting, water soluble benzodiazepine that has anxiolytic, sedative, amanestiec, and muscle relaxant properties. Its sedation mechanism is GABA-mediated enhancing chloride conductance in the central nervous system. Although midazolam can be given for sedation via mutiple routes, IV administration is preferred, if vascular access is present. The onset of action is typically 3–5 minutes and lasts 30–45 minutes with IV administation at 0.1 mg/kg with successive 0.05 mg/kg every 5 minutes (maximum 4 mg).
Although NICE recommends the consideration of midazolam as one of the first-line sedative drug for painless imaging procedures owing to a wide margin of safety [13], it is currently used as an adjuct sedative with either dexmedetomidine or ketamine rather than single primary agent for pediatric MRI [18,34-37] because of the high sedation failure rates, short duration of action, as well as frequent significant respiratory depression at deeply sedating doses [38,39]. However, coadministration of midazolam and other sedative agents, especially opioids, in children is not acceptable because of siginficant increases in cardiorespiratory depression and difficulty in predicting sedation effects [9]. Paradoxical excitement or delirium have been reported, usually following an IV dose, and may be managed with low-dose flumazenil.
Flumazenil is a benzodiazepine antagonist used to reverse sedation and/or respiratory depression caused by midazolam. Dosing starts at 0.01–0.02 mg/kg and can be repeated until adequate reversal of midazolam is noted (maximum 1 mg) [40]. As flumazenil is highly lipohlic, its onet of action is rapid (1–2 minutes) but duration of action is relatively short (30–45 minutes), so monitoring for resedation is necessary [41].

4) Ketamine

Ketamine is a phencyclidine analog and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist that induces sedation, dissociative amnesia, and analgesia. Ketamine is used as a sedative for MRI because its analgesic component is not necessary for MRI. Administration routes are IV (0.05–2 mg/kg), intramuscular (IM; 4–5 mg), oral (5–6 mg/kg), and intranasal (5–10 mg/kg). IV use is preferable if IV access is available. The onset of action is rapid (1–2 minutes), the duration is brief (10–15 minutes) and the recovery is short (30–60 minutes) [42]. Ketamine is attractive for pediatric sedation because of its relatively short duration of action, multiple routes of administration, preservation of airway reflexes, and sympathomimetic properties including increase heart rates and blood pressure. Although sedation can be achieved with minimal respiratory depression, ketamine has various and lengthy adverse effect profiles including hallucination, emergence delirium, agitation, nausea and vomiting, hypersalivation, and laryngospasm, which may be distressing to both the child and parent. Often there are random movements of the extremities rendering this drug less than ideal for procedures where the patient must lie perfectly still during MRI scans. Thus, ketamine is used with a combination of other sedative agents to counterbalance the side effects and enhance the beneficial effects for each drug rather than as a sole sedative agent for MRI. Ketamine can counterbalance the cardiorespiratory depression effect of propofol and prolonged recovery of dexmedetomidine by reducing the dose requirements of each drug for MRI sedation in children [43-45].

5) Dexmedetomidine

Dexmedetomidine is a selective central α2 receptor agonist that has sedative, analgesic, anti-shivering sympatholytic, and anxiolytic properties. Its sedative mechanism results from a decrease in norepinephrine release from presynaptic neurons with the initiation of postsynaptic activation, attenuating central nervous system excitation. The most unique characteristic of dexmedetomidine is the preservation of respiratory drive with a low incidence of apnea, respiratory depression, or airway obstruction, which is highly advantageous in children who are prone to respiratory depression, such as those with neurodevelopmental disabilities or obstructive sleep apnea, while receiving sedation/analgesia [46-48].
Patients exhibit biphasic cardiovascular responses after IV administration of dexmedetomidine [49,50]: initial transient hypertension along with a baroreceptor-mediated decrease in heart rate by α2B-adrenoreceptor vasoconstriction followed by hypotension and bradycardia (10%–30% from baseline) by α2A-adrenoreceptor-mediated inhibition of central sympathetic outflow. The hypertensive effect and associated bradycardia can be reduced by infusion of loading dose over a 10 minutes period. Prehydration of 10 mL/kg of normal saline solution is effective in decreasing the incidence of dexmedetomidine-related hypotension [51]. However, prophylaxis with glycopyrrolate for bradycardia is not routinely recommended because of transient severe hypertension [52]. Children are usually able to maintain systemic blood pressure with minimal impact on cardiac output and ultimately end organ perfusion.
Dexmedetomidine may be administered by oral, buccal, nasal, rectal, subcutaneous, IM, and IV routes. Dosing and bioavailability vary depending on the route of administration. When administered through IV, the average onset of sedation is 8.6 minutes with a recovery time of 41.4 minutes [53]. The rapid phase redistribution half-life is approximately 7 minutes, and the terminal elimination half-life is approximately 2 hours [54]. The success rate of sedation for pediatric MRI ranges from 83.3% with a 1 μg/kg bolus followed by 0.5 μg/kg/hr infusion to 98% with a 3 μg/kg bolus followed by 2 μg/kg/hr infusion [47,53]. Buccal (a mean of 2.20±0.38 μg/kg) and intranasal (3 μg/kg) administration of dexmedetomidine may be useful in children with difficult IV cannulation, but their success rates of sedation for MRI are lower than IV administration and more sedative supplementation is required than IV administration [34,35,55,56]. Generally, a lack of respiratory depression combined with a relatively short half-life makes dexmedetomidine a useful single sedative agent for an ambulatory pediatric MRI setting. However, in spite of a similar success rate, it has slower onset and longer recovery compared to propofol in children undergoing MRI [54,57,58].
With the evolution of more complex MRI studies, dexmedetomidine is preferred to propofol for magnetoencephalography scans, which are employed for presurgical planning with intractable epilepsy due to the preservation of epileptiform activity [59]. The MRI sleep study is a relatively new imaging technique for the evaluation of obstructive sleep apnea. Minimal respiratory depression of dexmedetomidine decreased the use of artificial and manual airway supports such as the chin lift and shoulder roll, which can artificially alter the MRI results [60].
2. Anesthetic agents

1) Propofol

Propofol (2,6-diisopropylphenyl) is a potent IV anesthetic agent that has hypnotic but no analgesic properties via the potentiation of GABAA receptors and inhibition of NMDA receptors. Unlike with other sedative agents, propofol use is limited to the IV route. Propofol has a fast onset of action (10–50 seconds) and short distribution half-life (approximately 9 minutes in the pediatric population) [60]. Deep sedation is typically induced with a bolus dose of 1–3 mg/kg and 0.5–1 mg/kg supplementation every 1–2 minutes [61]. Higher dosing is often required for younger pediatric patients because of their higher volume of distribution, shorter elimination half-life, and higher plasma clearance [62]. A single dose or intermittent bolus doses of propofol may be suitable for brief procedures (<30 minutes) [63], but continuous infusion of 2–5 mg/kg/hr rather than intermittent administration is recommended for longer procedures [64] in children undergoing MRI. The use of MR-compatible infusion pumps allows for consistent maintenance of accurate dosing and reduces the amount of propofol need to achieve adequate and safe sedation in children undergoing MRI [65]. Although propofol is easily titratable, its narrow therapeutic margin combined with ultra-short-acting pharmacokinetic profiles is associated with the rapid progression of sedation levels leading to general anesthesia.
Because of its rapid onset, short recovery time, antiemetic properties, and low incidence of emergence delirium, propofol has gained popularity as a primary sole sedative agent for MRI in children. Compared to most other sedative regimens, propofol provides the shortest onset and recovery and a high sedation success rate for pediatric MRI [66-70]. However, propofol commonly causes hypotension and dose-dependent respiratory depression including hypoventilation, apnea, and airway obstruction, which may be exaggerated with concomitant opioid use [27,71-73]. Sedation providers must monitor the respiratory rate and etCO2 in children receiving propofol sedation. As mentioned above, coadministration of ketamine may be an option to counterbalance propofol-induced cardiorespiratory depression [45]. Pain during peripheral IV injection can be distressing to the parent and child but may be limited with low-dose lidocaine, fentanyl, or ketamine pretreatment [74]. Because propofol contains egg lecithin, patients with a history of egg allergy are at increased risk of an allergic reaction to propofol [75]. Because of its rapid acting and reliable titration of drug concentration, propofol is also used for general anesthesia with spontaneous ventilation, endotracheal intubation, or laryngeal mask airway (LMA) for MRI in children [76-78].

2) Sevoflurane

Generally deep sedation with spontaneous ventilation is preferred for MRI because of limited medical resources (mechanical ventilation and longer surveillance period). However, general anesthesia for MRI is indicated in select children with congenital heart defects or airway abnormalities, long-duration scans for staging investigations of malignancies, or those who have had previous sedation failure. Some MRI scans (cardiac, thoracic, or abdominal) require breath-holding to obtain adequate images. In such cases requiring the need for a secure airway, it is necessary to control airway with LMA or endotracheal intubation and deliver general anesthesia.
Sevoflurane is the inhalational agent of choice in children due to its lack of airway irritability and ability to provide stable hemodynamic function, together with its rapid onset and offset. Sevoflurane has been successfully used in newborns and infants with a maximum vaporizer setting of 4 vol% for MRI [79,80]. Sevoflurane anesthesia provides higher success rates (92% vs. 80%) and faster onset and recovery, but a higher incidence of emergence delirium than propofol anesthesia in children undergoing MRI [70,76]. Major airway-related adverse events such as respiratory apnea and severe airway obstruction occurred in 0.4% of children, while preterm infants are at higher risk compared to term infants after sevoflurane anesthesia for MRI [81]. Positive pressure ventilation with endotracheal intubation or LMA may result in more extensive atelectasis in children after MRI compared to spontaneous ventilation in children receiving sevoflurane-based anesthesia [78,82].
Sevoflurane-based anesthesia is also reported to be highly feasible and safe in children with neuropsychiatric disorders undergoing MRI. Mongodi et al. [83] found that induction and maintenance of sevoflurane anesthesia inhaled by a reservoir bag mask at 8.0 and 2.5 vol%, respectively, provides a median time of 15 minutes for full recovery and lower rates of mechanical ventilation compared to other pharmacological approaches in retrospective analysis of data of 10 years at a single center. They identified children with an American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) score>1, male sex, prolonged procedures, and neuromuscular diseases as higher risk for general and respiratory complications in this population.
Many of the drugs used for sedation and analgesia in children are not approved by the Ministry of Food and Drug Safety (MFDS), formerly the Korean Food and Drug Administration (KFDA), for use in children under certain ages (e.g., fentanyl<2 years; remifentanil<1 year; propofol<3 years for anesthesia and <18 years for sedation; and dexmedetomidine<18 years of age). The lack of MFDS approval does not imply that a drug can/should not be used; rather, it means that pharmaceutical manufacturers never carried out the appropriate research to gain MFDS approval. Off-label use of drugs for sedation of children has grown exponentially prior to the development of well-controlled clinical trials in the pediatric population. A number of legislative changes are intended to improve drug labeling for safe and efficacious sedation in children [84,85].
As the need for deep sedation and general anesthesia for children in an MRI suite continues to expand, anesthesiologists continue to be frequently requested to provide anesthesia services for these venues. The choice of agent and technique used for sedation or general anesthesia reflects the experience of the sedation provider, potential constraints imposed by the patient and procedure, availability of appropriate monitoring equipment, and institutional policies in place.
The use of traditional sedative agents such as pentobarbital and chloral hydrate has decreased due to long onset and recovery. Midazolam and ketamine are preferred as the adjunct rather than single use to counterbalance adverse events of other sedative agent. Currently, the use of propofol with high effectiveness and rapid recovery and dexmedetomidine with respiratory drive preservation have increased as the single agent for deep sedation and general anesthesia in children undergoing ambulatory MRI.
To provide the most effective, efficient, and safe sedation and anesthesia for children, the anesthesia service team should be familiar with MRI-specific safety issues and the requirements of optimal quality images for precise diagnosis before induction. Further improvements of quality and cost effectiveness with new promising drugs are also necessary.

Conflicts of interest

No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was reported.

Table 1.
Levels of sedation defined by American Society of Anesthesiologists
Factor Minimal sedation Moderate sedation Deep sedation General anesthesia
Responsiveness Normal response to verbal stimulation Purposeful response to verbal or tactile stimulation Purposeful response following repeated or painful stimulation Unarousable even with painful stimulation
Airway Unaffected No intervention required Intervention may be required Intervention often required
Spontaneous ventilation Unaffected Adequate May be inadequate Frequently inadequate
Cardiovascular function Unaffected Usually maintained Usually maintained May be impaired

Reprinted from “Continuum of depth of sedation: definition of general anesthesia and levels of sedation/analgesia” developed by the American Society of Anesthesiologists [5].

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