Knowledge Base

Procedural Sedation

Knowledge Base

title: "Procedural Sedation"

Procedural Sedation

Key Facts

Procedural sedation requires continuous airway readiness (suction, BVM, oxygen) and close monitoring.

Ketamine preserves airway reflexes better than many agents but can cause laryngospasm and emergence reactions.

Overview

This article covers preparation, monitoring, and common agent-specific pitfalls.

Preparation

  • Confirm indication and fasting/aspiration risk context
  • Consent (where possible) and team roles (sedationist vs proceduralist)
  • Equipment ready: suction, BVM, oxygen, adjuncts, emergency drugs
  • Monitoring: SpO₂, ECG, BP, capnography (where available)

Common agents (high level)

  • Ketamine
  • Propofol
  • Midazolam/opioid combinations

Sources

  • CC Bible
  • Local sedation policy

Test Your Knowledge

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Related Topics

See also: Acute Pain Management, Ketamine, Airway Emergency