Few situations in pediatric emergency medicine require as much preparation, adaptability, and situational awareness as procedural sedation.
You walk into the room. The child is already suspicious. The parent is anxious. The nurse is setting up supplies while everyone in the room quietly wonders whether this will be a straightforward laceration repair or a prolonged negotiation with a terrified toddler.
Even routine sedations can quickly become complicated, which is part of why preparation matters so much.
One of the most important (and humbling) truths about pediatric sedation is that it exists on a continuum. Children can move between levels of sedation faster and less predictably than adults.
At one end, you’ve got minimal sedation: your patient is calm, chatty, maybe telling you about their dog while you glue a laceration. At the other end? General anesthesia, where airway support is no longer optional — it’s your full-time job.
Most pediatric procedural sedations fall somewhere in between: in the moderate-to-deep sedation range, where children can drift more deeply sedated than intended.
Even if you aim for moderate sedation, you need to be prepared to manage deep sedation and airway complications at any point during the procedure.
The goals of procedural sedation sound straightforward:
In practice, balancing these goals can be challenging. Too light, and the child is distressed. Too deep, and now you’re managing an airway.
If pediatric sedation had a “Most Wanted” list, airway compromise and hypoventilation would top it.
Not rare complications. Not edge cases. The most common serious issues.
Which is why sedation is less about the drug you choose and more about your preparation:
Sedation-related respiratory compromise isn’t always obvious at first. The earliest signs may be subtle: decreased chest rise, changes in the end-tidal CO₂ waveform, or a gradual rise in ETCO₂. Small changes in respiratory effort, capnography, or oxygen saturation are often the earliest signs that a child needs intervention.
Sedation begins before the medication, with patient selection.
Your ideal candidate? A healthy kid (ASA class I or II status), normal airway, no significant cardiopulmonary disease.
Your “maybe think twice” list includes children with complex medical conditions, difficult airways, severe obstructive sleep apnea, or prior sedation complications.
Procedure length matters too. Procedures longer than 30 minutes increase the likelihood of redosing, hypoventilation, and complications. Longer procedures become even more challenging in settings with limited staffing or solo physician coverage.
Let’s talk about the most underutilized sedation tools in medicine: distraction and human connection.
Many children tolerate procedures surprisingly well when anxiety and sensory distress are addressed first.
Non-pharmacologic strategies are often surprisingly effective:
They can reduce medication needs and sometimes eliminate them entirely.
Before escalating to sedation, don’t forget your procedural basics.
LET gel, buffered lidocaine, and regional nerve blocks can transform a chaotic situation into something surprisingly manageable.
A well-executed nerve block can dramatically reduce pain, movement, and sedation requirements.
Ketamine remains one of the most commonly used medications for pediatric procedural sedation in emergency departments. It provides analgesia, amnesia, and dissociation while usually preserving airway reflexes and cardiovascular stability.
Ketamine produces dissociative sedation, allowing many children to tolerate painful procedures while maintaining spontaneous respirations and protective airway reflexes.
But it’s not perfect. Expect occasional vomiting, increased secretions, and the occasional dramatic emergence reaction.
Intranasal medications have changed the game for pediatric care.
Intranasal midazolam, fentanyl, ketamine, and dexmedetomidine are increasingly used in pediatric emergency departments and urgent care settings because they avoid IV placement while still providing effective anxiolysis or analgesia.
They’re fast, effective, and often less traumatic, but not without downsides like burning and volume limitations.
Ketofol (ketamine + propofol) offers smoother sedation and faster recovery. Some clinicians use ketofol to balance the dissociative effects of ketamine with the shorter recovery profile of propofol. But the combination requires close monitoring for apnea and hypotension.
At a minimum, sedation requires continuous observation and pulse oximetry. For deeper sedation, add cardiac monitoring, capnography, IV access, and immediate access to airway equipment.
Capnography is especially valuable — it detects hypoventilation before oxygen saturation drops.
Even with careful preparation, pediatric sedation can be unpredictable. Children may develop paradoxical reactions, agitation during recovery, vomiting, or airway complications that require rapid intervention. The key is anticipating these possibilities before the procedure starts and having the staff, monitoring, and equipment ready to respond.
When procedural sedation goes well, it allows clinicians to perform necessary procedures safely while minimizing pain, fear, and psychological trauma for children and caregivers.
The medications matter. But preparation, communication, and thoughtful procedural planning matter just as much.