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a Royal Brompton Hospital / National Heart and Lung
Institute (Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine):
Department of Paediatric Cardiology, b Department of Paediatric Respiratory Medicine
Correspondence to: Professor A Redington, Department of Paediatric Cardiology, Royal Brompton Hospital, Sydney Street, London SW3 6NP.
Accepted 14 August 1996
Midazolam is the sedating agent of choice in many paediatric
intensive care units, and is usually administered as a continuous intravenous infusion with or without a preceding bolus dose.
Ten haemodynamically stable children, ventilated in the early
postoperative period after cardiac surgery and receiving intravenous morphine infusions, were given an intravenous bolus followed by a
continuous infusion of midazolam. Haemodynamic data were recorded before the bolus, and 15 minutes and one hour later. A bolus of midazolam lowered the cardiac output by 24.1%. Arterial blood pressure, oxygen consumption, and mixed venous oxygen content fell
significantly. There was a tendency for all variables subsequently to
recover towards baseline values, within one hour, during a continuous infusion.
An intravenous bolus of midazolam causes a transient but unwanted
fall in cardiac output. It is suggested that in children who are
receiving intravenous opiates, its use in the early postoperative period be limited to a continuous infusion.
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