Impact of a Sedation Reduction Protocol in Infants Undergoing MRI Scanning.

Adv Neonatal Care

Author Affiliations : Department of Pediatrics (Dr Bruckman and Dr Stefanescu), Department of Neurology (Dr Wing), Department of Neuroradiology (Dr Radhakrishnan), Indiana University (Ms Boyle) and Indiana University Health at Riley Hospital for Children (Mrs Blazier), Indianapolis, Indiana.

Published: April 2025


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is an important diagnostic tool for infants with possible brain abnormalities. While sedation may be necessary for high quality images, it carries risks of complications. The sedation rate for MRI procedure varies widely, ranging from 0% to 100%, influenced by infant characteristics and institutional practices, with an increasing focus on non-sedated or minimally sedated approaches to reduce risks.

Purpose: We studied sedation utilization in infants undergoing MRI scanning before and after implementing an MRI bundle.

Methods: This cohort study utilized a pre- post-intervention design. An MRI bundle, including a process map, a safety checklist and a questionnaire collecting detailed information on sedation, were developed for our off-unit MRI suite. Pre-intervention group included infants scanned March 2018 to February 2019, and Post-intervention group March 2019 to February 2022. We hypothesized that sedation rates would significantly decrease following the intervention.

Results: In the study, 229 infants in the Pre-Intervention group and 764 infants in the Post-Intervention group underwent MRI scanning. Sedation use decreased by 62%, from 29% pre-intervention to 18% post-intervention ( P = 0.0003). Post-intervention infants were 47.6% less likely to be sedated, adjusting for gestation-corrected age (OR 0.524 [0.369, 0.745]; P < 0.01). Each 1-week increase in gestation-corrected age was associated with a 7.1% increase in the odds of sedation, controlling for the intervention time-period (OR 1.071 [1.022, 1.122]; P = 0.004). The questionnaire was completed 72% of the time in the post-intervention group.

Implication For Practice And Research: A standardized approach and protocol development can significantly reduce sedation for neonatal MRI. This study offers guidance for future research and integrated care interventions across medical teams.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ANC.0000000000001243DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

mri scanning
12
infants undergoing
8
mri
8
undergoing mri
8
pre-intervention group
8
post-intervention group
8
infants
7
sedation
6
post-intervention
5
impact sedation
4

Similar Publications

Introduction: Anti-N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor (NMDA-R) encephalitis is a neuropsychiatric disorder with additional psychiatric features caused by NMDA-R immunoglobulin G (IgG) antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). This report presents the follow-up of a patient in whom we assumed mild NMDA-R encephalitis in the first psychotic episode.

Case Study: A patient with a prior episode of an acute polymorphic psychotic syndrome relapsed five and a half years later following a severe COVID-19 infection.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Bone scintigraphy is a sensitive imaging method to evaluate patients with suspected osteonecrosis. We assessed the diagnostic performance of combined bone single-photon emission computed tomography/computed tomography (SPECT/CT) (CBS) in patients with known rheumatic disease or other connective tissue disorders and clinical suspicion of osteonecrosis compared to magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).

Methods: This prospective diagnostic accuracy study included 70 patients with clinical suspicion of osteonecrosis in any bone who underwent a planar triple-phase bone scan along with a regional SPECT/CT (CBS) and regional MRI.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Evaluating the technical feasibility of biology-guided dose painting in proton therapy.

Phys Imaging Radiat Oncol

July 2025

Department of Electronics, Information and Bioengineering, Politecnico di Milano, Milan, Italy.

Biology-guided voxel-level inverse prescription mapping for dose painting (DP) using diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging was evaluated for technical feasibility in proton therapy for 10 skull-base chordoma patients. Patient-specific DP prescriptions were generated from tumour cellularity and implemented in a clinical treatment planning system. Compared with uniform plans, DP achieved lower conformity (although >97 %), improved target dose metrics, reduced doses to most organs at risk, and increased tumour control probability without exceeding clinical constraints.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In this work, confocal microscopy is employed to study the loading and fouling behavior in AAV affinity resins as well as the implications of resin reuse with several commercial chromatographic materials and feed mixtures. Resin samples are obtained from both batch and column experiments, and confocal microscopy is carried out to examine the adsorption profiles in the beads after loading, wash, elution, and CIP steps. A comparison of PSDVB-based POROS CaptureSelect (PCS) AAV resins with agarose-based AVIPure AAV9 resins revealed distinct differences in both AAV transport and resin fouling.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Fetal MRI is increasingly used to investigate fetal lung pathologies, and super-resolution (SR) algorithms could be a powerful clinical tool for this assessment. Our goal was to investigate whether SR reconstructions result in an improved agreement in lung volume measurements determined by different raters, also known as inter-rater reliability.

Materials And Methods: In this single-center retrospective study, fetal lung volumes calculated from both SR reconstructions and the original images were analyzed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF