RT Journal Article T1 [Midazolam/fentanyl vs propofol/remifentanil in immediate postoperative with short-term mechanical ventilation]. T2 Sedoanalgesia con midazolam/fentanilo vs. propofol/remifentanilo en postoperatorio inmediato con ventilación mecánica de corta duración. A1 López Castilla, José Domingo A1 Sánchez Fernández, Norma A1 Charlo Molina, María Teresa A1 Vázquez Florido, Antonio A1 Murillo Pozo, Maria Angeles A1 Sánchez Ganfornina, Inmaculada A1 Fernández Elías, Manuel A1 Sánchez Valderrábanos, Elía K1 Fentanilo K1 Fentanyl K1 Midazolam K1 Propofol K1 Remifentanil K1 Remifentanilo K1 Sedoanalgesia AB Compare between 2sedoanalgesia regimes, the time from withdrawal of the medication until the patient wakes up and until extubation. Observational study on pediatric patients after elective surgery that needed mechanical ventilation for a period maximum to 72hours. We compared 2independent groups of patients: group A: patients collected prospectively who received sedoanalgesia with propofof-remifentanil and group B: patients who received midazolam-fentanyl collected retrospectively by reviewing medical records and database of the unit. The main variables studied were: Age, weight, sex, interventions type, sedoanalgesia scales, drugs dosages, time from withdrawal of medication to awakening and extubation, and adverse effects. We collected 82 patients, 43 in group A and 39 in group B. Age (arithmetical mean±standard deviation of patients were 49±65 months, weight 17±16kg. Mechanical ventilation time medium was 22hours (3-72), wake-up time from withdrawal after removing sedoanalgesia was of 11,8±10,6minutes group A and 137,3±45minutes group B (P Patients treated with propofol-remifentanil have significantly shorter times to wake up, extubation and withdrawal from mechanical ventilation after stopping the medication. In the midazolam-fentanyl group, respiratory depression was more frequent, although the percentage of adverse effects were similar in both groups. Both the combination of propofol-remifentanil and midazolam-fentanyl appear to be effective as a sedative-analgesic regimen for patients undergoing mechanical ventilation after surgery. YR 2021 FD 2021-01-25 LK http://hdl.handle.net/10668/21935 UL http://hdl.handle.net/10668/21935 LA es DS RISalud RD Apr 9, 2025