Published June 2, 2026 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Anesthetic management in neonates and infants under one year: Clinical and physiological perspectives

  • 1. Bukhara state medical institute

Description

 Anesthesia in neonates and infants under one year of age presents unique challenges to anesthesiologists due to the profound anatomical, physiological, and pharmacological differences between this age group and older children or adults. This article provides a comprehensive review of the critical clinical and physiological characteristics that dictate anesthetic management in early infancy. We examine the immature respiratory, cardiovascular, renal, and central nervous systems, highlighting how these factors influence the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of commonly used anesthetic agents. Furthermore, the discussion focuses on recent clinical trial insights regarding neurotoxicity, intraoperative monitoring, and specialized airway management strategies. Understanding these distinctive variables is paramount to minimizing perioperative morbidity and mortality, optimizing surgical outcomes, and ensuring neurodevelopmental safety in this vulnerable patient population.

Files

70-72.pdf

Files (310.1 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:a1c5bf8284b349e9b9cf92229f10fca3
310.1 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Dates

Accepted
2026-06-02
1

References

  • 1.Davidson, A. J., & Sun, L. S. (2018). Clinical evidence for any effect of anesthesia on the developing brain. Anesthesiology, 128(4), 837–853.
  • 2.McCann, M. E., de Graaff, J. C., Dorris, L., et al. (2019). Neurodevelopmental outcome at 5 years of age after general anaesthesia or awake-regional anaesthesia in infancy (GAS): an international, multicentre, randomised, equivalence trial. The Lancet, 393(10173), 747–759.
  • 3.Coté, C. J., Lerman, J., & Anderson, B. J. (2019). A Practice of Anesthesia for Infants and Children (6th ed.). Elsevier.
  • 4.Volkov, A. V., & Saito, S. (2021). Physiological features of the neonatal airway and its implications for modern pediatric anesthesia. Journal of Anesthetic Clinic, 34(2), 112–119.
  • 5.Cravero, J. P., Beach, S. M., & Blike, G. T. (2022). Adverse events during pediatric anesthesia and sedation: A progressive analysis of risk factors. Pediatric Anesthesia, 32(5), 588–597.