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RECRUITING
NCT05934669
PHASE4

IN Midazolam vs IN Dexmedetomidine vs IN Ketamine During Minimal Procedures in Pediatric ED

Sponsor: University of Oklahoma

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Pain in young children has been universally under-recognized due to their inability to describe or localize pain. Improvements in pharmacological interventions are necessary to optimize patient and family experience and allow for successful and efficient procedure completion. This is the first study that will compare three intranasal medications (Intranasal Midazolam, Dexmedetomidine, and Ketamine) to evaluate the length of stay after medication administration along with patient and provider satisfaction. The objective of this study is to demonstrate superior intranasal anxiolysis for pediatric laceration repairs with the shortest emergency department stay and highest patient and provider satisfaction. Based on previous studies and medication pharmacokinetics, we hypothesize that Intranasal Ketamine will have the shortest Emergency Department (ED) stay followed by Midazolam and then Dexmedetomidine with the longest stay; however, Dexmedetomidine will have the highest patient and provider satisfaction followed by Ketamine and then Midazolam.

Official title: Randomized Controlled Trial of Intranasal (IN) Midazolam vs IN Dexmedetomidine vs IN Ketamine Evaluating Length of Stay After Medication Administration and Anxiolysis During Minimal Procedures in Pediatric Population in Pediatric Emergency Department

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

1 Year - 5 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

90

Start Date

2023-11-14

Completion Date

2025-06

Last Updated

2024-06-28

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

DRUG

Intranasal Midazolam

Using a computer-generated randomization schedule by the research pharmacist, all 90 subjects will be divided into 3 even groups to receive either medication A (intranasal Midazolam), B (intranasal Dexmedetomidine), or C (intranasal Ketamine). Based on the randomization schedule, the pharmacist will dispense medication A, B, or C to the chronological number provided in the order. The total amount of the medication will be based on the patient's charted weight. Small volumes of less than 1ml per nostril are preferred for reliable absorption; therefore, the medication will be dispensed in a 1ml syringe and the barrel of the syringe will be covered by the pharmacist. All the syringes sent from the pharmacy will appear the same, regardless of the volume of the medication.

DRUG

Intranasal Dexmedetomidine

See above

DRUG

Intranasal Ketamine

See above

Locations (1)

University of Oklahoma Health Sciences Center

Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, United States