Pharmacodynamics & Kinetics
Doses
Side Effects
Super Fun Facts
More Doses!
100

A major risk with administering drugs in pediatric patients due to decreased levels of protein binding

What is drug overdose and toxicity?

FYI...
• Decreased protein binding of drugs in the newborn period 
• Decreased concentration of plasma proteins, persistence of fetal albumin, acidotic pH, and increased free fatty acids alter binding properties of plasma proteins and drugs 
• Example: Thiopental is highly protein bound, so the fraction of unbound drug is 2x greater in the neonate than the adult (neonate > adult > child) 

100

The reason as to why reduced doses are frequently required in pediatric patients

What is reduced metabolism & delayed elimination?

FYI...
Neonatal concentration & activity of many microsomal enzymes are reduced/absent! (CYP450 <50% as in adults)
• GFR is reduced until about 5-7 months 

100

In pediatrics patients, this induction agent may increase salivation, precipitate seizures, and increase IOP & ICP. 

What is Ketamine?

100

Three drugs that you should always have prepared and ready for pediatric procedures 

What is...

Succinylcholine (IM & IV doses) 

Atropine (0.02mg/kg IV)

Epinephrine (consideration concentrations from 1-100mcg/mL available depending on patient...10mcg/kg for resuscitation!)

100

IV doses of propofol for infants & children

What is...

Infants 4 mg/kg IV

Children 3 mg/kg IV

FYI...
• Bolus doses are typically increased due to the large Vd in pediatric patients
• Clearance is similar to adults
• Prolonged recovery in neonates 

200

In infants, an immature BBB increases sensitivity to this class of medications, raising the risk of respiratory depression. 

What are opioids?

FYI...
 Increased permeability to sedatives, opioids, and hypnotics
• Their immature BBB can affect onset time as well as duration of response


200

IV & IM induction dose for Ketamine in pediatric patients

What is...

IV: 1-3mg/kg 

IM: 5-10mg/kg 

FYI...
• Repeat/rescue dose 0.5-1mg/kg PRN.                  
• Onset: 30 seconds; DOA 5-8 minutes
• Elimination half-life 2.5-3hrs

• PONV 33% in children!

200

The 2 major side effects that are possible after giving a pediatric patient succinylcholine


What is bradycardia & asystole?

FYI...
• Can give atropine 0.02mg/kg IV prior to administration

200

These two anesthetic agents are most commonly used for an inhalational induction

What is...Sevoflurane & Nitrous

FYI...
• Uptake & elimination is more rapid in pediatric patients!
• Greater alveolar ventilation to FRC ratio and fraction of CO going to the VRG
• Reduced blood:gas & tissue:blood solubility

• Sevo MAC: 3.3% neonates, 3.2% 1-6months, decreases to 2.5% at 10y/o, then continues to drop

200

IV & PO dose of midazolam for pediatric patients 

What is...

PO: 0.5-1 mg/kg (MAX dose of 20 mg)

IV: 0.1mg/kg 

FYI...
• PO dose given ~30 min before procedure
• Bolus in preterm/term neonates can lead to profound hypotension (especially with concurrent fentanyl administration)!

300

These neuromuscular blockers do NOT have decreased clearance in neonates/infants.... and WHY 

What is Atracurium, Cisatracurium, and Mivacurium?

Hoffman's elimination!

FYI...
• Duration of action in infants is typically longer because of immature hepatic & renal function

300

NSAID IV doses in pediatric patients: Ketorolac & Acetaminophen

What is...

Ketorolac 0.5 mg/kg IV

Acetaminophen 15 mg/kg IV (max 60mg/kg per day) 

300

This NMB is good for high-dose opioid anesthesia (like CV & high risk cases) because it increases HR and decreases opioid induced chest wall & glottis rigidity 

What is pancuronium?

FYI...
• ALL NMBs must be reversed! 
• Atropine 20mcg/kg + 1mg edrophonium 
• Glycopyrrolate 10mcg/kg + 50mcg/kg neostigmine
• Sugammadex can be used with same dosing as adults


300

The reason why infants & children experience a faster distribution of drugs & onset of action 

What is cardiac output?

FYI...
• Pharmacokinetic principle of distribution is also affected by protein binding in pediatric populations
• Infants & children have less circulating albumin & a1 acid glycoprotein which can lead to toxicity with highly protein bound drugs

300

MAC value of sevoflurane for fullterm neonates

What is 3.3%?

FYI...

• MAC of sevoflurane is the greatest in full term neonates and slowly decreases after
• MAC of isoflurane is the greatest in 1-6 month olds (1.87%) and decreases thereafter
• Uptake of volatile anesthetics is increased in neonates and infants due to increased cardiac output

400

The reason why NMBD doses are the same in adult & pediatric pateints, despite pediatric patients having a larger Vd (ECF)

A lower plasma concentration is needed to reach effect! Also, infants have immature neuromuscular transmission until 2 months with increased sensitivity 

FYI...
• Children 2-12y/o have increased dose requirements compared to adults
• Inhalational agents will prolong DOA
• DOA is longer in infants due to hepatic & renal function

400

IV dose of morphine in pediatric patients AND the age group it should be used with caution

What is...

0.1-0.2mg/kg IV

< 1 year of age 

FYI...
Term & preterm infants have decreased clearance & prolonged elimination half-life
• Clearance increases to adult values by 3-6months
• Concentration in the neonate's brain is 2-3x higher due to their immature BBB and the high water solubility of morphine

400

This anesthetic complication is characterized by metabolic acidosis, rhabdomyolysis, and CV collapse after high-dose infusions 

What is Propofol Related Infusion Syndrome (PRIS)?

400

The treatment for succinylcholine induced cardiac arrest

What is 10 mg/kg IV calcium chloride OR 30 mg/kg IV calcium gluconate

FYI...
• There is no upper limit on dose of calcium! Repeat until conversion to NSR!
• Defibrillation is NOT effective! 
• High mortality rate when treated as MH without calcium administration

400

Doses for thiopental in pediatric patients for healthy neonates, infants, & children

What is...

Healthy neonate 4-5mg/kg

Infants 7-8mg/kg

Children 5-6mg/kg

500

The reasons why pediatric patients have unique pharmacokinetic considerations compared to adults (4)

What is...

Altered protein binding

Large Vd (ECF)

Smaller fat/muscle stores

Immature organ (renal & hepatic) function

500

Intralipid dose for local anesthetic toxicity in pediatric patients

What is 1.5mL/kg bolus followed by 0.5-1mL/kg/min?

FYI...
• Pediatric patients have a lower concentration of a1-acid glycoproteins AND reduced CYP450 system!
• Increased risk of CNS & cardiovascular toxicity
• Bupivacaine max dose for neonates <6 months is reduced to 1.5mg/kg
• Ropivicaine max dose for neonates <6 months is also reduced to 0.5-1.5mg/kg

500

Three adverse events pediatric patients are at a greater risk for during an inhalational induction


What is bradycardia, hypotension, and cardiac arrest?

500

Four drugs thought to cause neuronal apoptosis 

*BONUS*: What IV anesthetic agent is thought to mitigate neuronal apoptosis?

What is...

Ketamine

Isoflurane

Midazolam

Nitrous 

*BONUS ANSWER*: Dexmedetomidine

500

Succinylcholine doses for infants, children, laryngospasm treatment, and IM administration :)

What is...

Infants: 3 mg/kg IV

Children: 2 mg/kg IV

Laryngospasm: 0.1 mg/kg IV

4 mg/kg IM

FYI...
• Remember, fasciculations will not be observed in infants!
• BLACK BOX warning for pediatric/adolescent patients (except emergency airway) due to hyperkalemic arrest