Journal article

Target-controlled infusion versus manually-controlled infusion of propofol for general anaesthesia or sedation in adults

K Leslie, O Clavisi, J Hargrove

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | Published : 2008

Abstract

Background: Continuous infusions of the intravenous anaesthetic propofol are commonly used to induce and maintain sedation and general anaesthesia. Infusion devices can be manually controlled (MCI) where the anaesthetist makes each change to the infusion rate or target-controlled (TCI) where the anaesthetist sets a target blood or effect-site concentration and the computerised infusion device makes the necessary changes to the infusion rate. Randomized trials have explored the differences in quality of anaesthesia, adverse event rate and cost between TCI and MCI but the effectiveness of TCI compared with MCI remains controversial. As TCI is in widespread international use, and potentially ma..

View full abstract

University of Melbourne Researchers