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Pre-operative fasting in children
Author(s) -
Peter Frykholm,
Nicola Disma,
Hanna Andersson,
Christiane Beck,
Lionel Bouvet,
Eloïse Cercueil,
Elizabeth Elliott,
Jan Hofmann,
Rebecca S. Isserman,
Anna Klaucane,
Fabian Kuhn,
Mathilde De Queiroz Siqueira,
David Rosen,
Diana Rudolph,
Alexander R. Schmidt,
A. Schmitz,
Daniel Stocki,
Robert Sümpelmann,
Paul A. Stricker,
Mark Thomas,
Francis Veyckemans,
Arash Afshari
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
european journal of anaesthesiology
Language(s) - Uncategorized
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.445
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 1365-2346
pISSN - 0265-0215
DOI - 10.1097/eja.0000000000001599
Subject(s) - medicine , preoperative fasting , gastric emptying , guideline , evidence based practice , intensive care medicine , evidence based medicine , stomach , surgery , alternative medicine , pathology , perioperative
Current paediatric anaesthetic fasting guidelines have recommended conservative fasting regimes for many years and have not altered much in the last decades. Recent publications have employed more liberal fasting regimes with no evidence of increased aspiration or regurgitation rates. In this first solely paediatric European Society of Anaesthesiology and Intensive Care (ESAIC) pre-operative fasting guideline, we aim to present aggregated and evidence-based summary recommendations to assist clinicians, healthcare providers, patients and parents. We identified six main topics for the literature search: studies comparing liberal with conservative regimens; impact of food composition; impact of comorbidity; the use of gastric ultrasound as a clinical tool; validation of gastric ultrasound for gastric content and gastric emptying studies; and early postoperative feeding. The literature search was performed by a professional librarian in collaboration with the ESAIC task force. Recommendations for reducing clear fluid fasting to 1 h, reducing breast milk fasting to 3 h, and allowing early postoperative feeding were the main results, with GRADE 1C or 1B evidence. The available evidence suggests that gastric ultrasound may be useful for clinical decision-making, and that allowing a 'light breakfast' may be well tolerated if the intake is well controlled. More research is needed in these areas as well as evaluation of how specific patient or treatment-related factors influence gastric emptying.

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