An Investigation of the Safety of Midazolam Use in Hospital
โ Scribed by Wanju S. Dai; Songlin Xue; Kisook Yoo; Judith K. Jones; James Labraico
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 138 KB
- Volume
- 6
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1053-8569
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Objective ร To investigate whether an association exists between midazolam use and serious cardiorespiratory events or death.
Design ร Retrospective analysis of data in an inpatient record linkage database, collected between March 1986 and October 1987 from 14 hospitals in the United States.
Patients ร A cohort of 19,112 patients who received injectable midazolam or diazepam on the same day that a medical procedure was performed.
Main outcome measures ร An attempt was made to identify suspected serious cardiorespiratory adverse events and deaths that occurred within 24 h of study-drug administration. Death rates within 24 h following study-drug administration were compared between patients who received injectable midazolam and those who received injectable diazepam.
Results ร Validation analysis of the information in the computerized record linkage database indicated that serious cardiac and respiratory adverse events that occurred within 24 h of study-drug administration could not be reliably identiยฎed. Therefore, a comparison of the serious cardiorespiratory adverse event rates following administration of midazolam versus diazepam could not be made. Death rates within 24 h of study-drug administration could be evaluated. For the cohort as a whole, the death rate was signiยฎcantly lower among patients who received midazolam than among those who received diazepam (0.76% versus 1.93%, p `0X01). This dierence remained statistically signiยฎcant, after adjusting for age, sex, comorbidity diagnosis, concomitant drug use, type of medical procedure, and hospital size and teaching capability.
Conclusions ร The results suggest that there is no increased risk of death associated with midazolam administration when compared to diazepam administration for endoscopic, conscious sedative, and general anesthetic procedures in hospitals.
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