Use of local anesthesia, conscious sedation with a combination of a sedative and anesthetic drug during surgical procedure is an approach designed to avoid intubation and which produces less adverse events compared to general anesthesia. In the present study, a comparison was made between the efficacy and safety of remimazolam besylate and propofol for facial plastic surgery.
To evaluate the clinical efficacy, comfort and incidence of adverse reactions of remimazolam compared with propofol combined with alfentanil in outpatient facial plastic surgery.
In this randomized, single-blind, single-center, comparative study, facial plastic surgery patients were randomly divided into remimazolam-alfentanil (n = 50) and propofol-alfentanil (n = 50) groups for sedation and analgesia. The primary endpoint was the incidence of hypoxemia, while secondary endpoints included efficacy and safety evaluations.
There were no significant differences regarding the surgical procedure, sedation and induction times, pain and comfort scores, muscle strength recovery, heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure, but the dosage of alfentanil administered to the remimazolam group (387.5 mg) was lower than for the propofol group (600 mg). The incidence of oxygen saturation reduction (P = 0.046) and towing of the mandibular (P = 0.028), as well as wake-up (P = 0.027) and injection pain (P = 0.008), were significantly higher in the propofol group compared to the remimazolam group.
Remimazolam and propofol had similar efficacies for sedation and analgesia during facial plastic surgery, but especially the incidence of respiratory depression was significantly lower in patients given remimazolam.
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