Nitrous oxide is an inhaled sedative that provides anxiolysis and analgesia for brief medical procedures. It works quickly by crossing the blood-brain barrier and is eliminated rapidly through exhalation. Potential side effects include nausea, vomiting, and diffusion hypoxia if not administered properly. Safety considerations include contraindications for patients with conditions involving trapped gas and ensuring adequate oxygenation when the nitrous oxide is discontinued. Nurse administration of nitrous oxide requires monitoring vital signs and scavenging expired gases.
2. Pharmacologic properties
Considerations for use
Contraindications
Potential complications
Safety
Care and education
Objectives
3. Nitrous Oxide is a very quick acting inhaled sedation
medicine that decreases discomfort and anxiety.
Sometimes called “laughing gas”
Often given at the dentists office
Nitrous Oxide is a sweet-smelling, colorless gas.
It is heavier than air or oxygen
What does that mean?
Spilled/wasted gas that is not scavenged from the room
ends up on the floor
What is Nitrous Oxide?
4. Pharmacokinetic properties
Onset
Anywhere from a few seconds up to 3-5 minutes
Crosses the blood-brain barrier rapidly
Elimination
Rapid elimination
Unchanged with exhalation from the lungs
Do not hold a child close to your face while they are “waking up”
No significant metabolism by the liver or kidneys
Not stored in the tissues
5. Nitrous is generally used for shorter/brief procedures, it
is not to be used for prolonged periods
IV starts
Nitrous provides some venous dilation!
Difficult bladder catheterization
Laceration repairs
I&D
Foreign body removal
And more…
What are we using it for?
6. Anxiolytic
similar to oral Versed
Analgesic
For minimally painful procedures, it does not provide
maximum pain relief. Consider topical anesthetics, etc.
Amnestic
Clinical Properties
7. The most common side effects are:
Nausea
Vomiting
Diffusion hypoxia
The incidence of these side effects increases the longer the
patient is exposed to the gas, and when used at higher doses
(>50%)
Side Effects
8. -Consider pre-medicating with anti-emetics.
If nausea does not resolve consider turning down or
turning off the Nitrous and provide O2 bolus
Patients are “awake” so risk of aspiration is low
Nausea and Vomiting
9. When N2O is discontinued, it leaves blood more quickly
than nitrogen (N2) from the air is absorbed
The combination of N2O and N2 in the alveoli dilute O2 in
the alveoli which can lead to hypoxia.
Administer 100% oxygen for 5 minutes at the end of Nitrous
sedation to wash out the nitrous at the end of procedure.
*use mask so the exiting Nitrous is exhaled into the
mask instead of the room.
Diffusion hypoxia
10. Trapped gas will expand or will increase pressure if it
can’t expand…
What does that mean?
Nitrous should not be administered to any patient that
has a condition where air may be trapped in the body
Pneumothorax – can double in volume in 10 minutes
Bowel obstruction
CHI (because of possible increased ICP)
Intraocular surgery
Diving within 24 hours
Severe bullous emphysema (caution with Cystic Fibrosis)
Trapped Gas
11. Patients that can not have high concentrations of
oxygen
Impaired level of consciousness
Intoxicated with drugs or alcohol
Pregnancy
Vitamin B-12 deficiency
Healthy patients rebuild their own B-12 quickly so it is
not an issue.
Other Contraindications
12. Screen patient, family members, and staff
Impaired fetal development in 1st and possibly 2nd
trimesters
Infertility and miscarriage reported with unscavenged
systems
Pregnancy
13. Patient masks and tubing are single use/disposable
Equipment should be wiped down with department
specific cleaning agent between patient uses
The flowmeter on the system has a one-way valve to
prevent secretions from back flow into the system
Infection Control
14. Maintenance will check equipment quarterly or at anytime
if malfunction is suspected.
Scavenging system/make sure you are connected correctly
to wall suction
Gas connections and proper pressure readings
O2 pressure= 1500-2000
N2O pressure=750
O2 tank runs out 3X faster than N2O tank.
When N2O pressure decreases less than 750 you probably
only have 30 minutes left in tank. Replace immediately
when procedure complete.
Checking/maintaining equipment
15. Inspect Nitrous system for wear or leaks
Appropriately connected to suction/scavenging
system
Appropriate sized mask for the patient to prevent gas
leak around the mask.
Can increase/decrease the amount of air in the mask by
adding/subtracting air with luer lock syringe on front of
mask
Back up O2 and N2O tanks in place
Equipment Setup
16. Room and equipment set up per policy
Patient assessment and documentation completed by
RN
NPO status discussed- though patient not required to
be NPO
Patient & family questioned about pregnancy
Prior to administration
17. Formal informed consent does NOT need to be
obtained by the provider (i.e. no 4 page sheet to fill
out)
RNs will obtain a brief consent per nursing flow sheet
Consent
18. Gain the patients trust by allowing them to familiarize
themselves with the equipment before you use it
Educate the patient and parents about expectations
Consider scenting the mask with flavored chapstick, but
beware as this can increase nausea in an already nauseated
patient
Try to start with the patient sitting up, it is less intimidating
Consider letting the patient hold the mask themselves, but
only if they are able to maintain a good seal.
Rapport
19. All patients are different
Nitrous oxide does not work for everyone. Children
either react or don’t. More time on drug does not
equal greater sedation.
Discuss other options if the procedure can not be
completed or you are unable to achieve desired
effect.
What else do I need to know?
20. Attach to wall suction for proper scavenging
Visually inspect for leaks
Attach appropriate sized mask set-up
Make sure you and equipment are out of the way of
the provider performing the procedure
5 minutes of pre-oxygenation per policy
Administration
21. Pulse oximeter
Cardiac monitor
Blood pressure cuff
Same equipment as Moderate
Sedation
22. Mask On = Gas On
Mask Off = Gas Off
Mask On, Mask Off
23. 1. Open both tanks (O2 and N2O)
2. Turn the On/Off switch to On
3. Adjust the green (O2) and blue (N2O) levers
to administer a 50/50 mixture of oxygen and
Nitrous
Never turn on the gases until the
mask is sealed on the patients face!
As Easy as 1,2,3…
24. Grey bag should be ¾ full
If too much then decrease O2 flow
If flat then increase O2 flow
Flush button used to increase O2 for immediate use
Black box is vacuum control and should see ball at
low end of green
Green bag doesn’t need to be full
If too full then most likely suction not working well
Adminstration
25. Begin with a 50/50 mix of O2 and N2O and titrate to
achieve desired level of sedation/anxiolysis
Nitrous oxide may be administered to a maximum of
70%
Remember the patient is not “asleep”
Patient should appear calm and relaxed
Eyes will remain open
Desired Effects
26. 2 RNs at bedside at first
One to chart and one to administer N2O
Only need 2 RNs while N2O is flowing
Eventually experienced RNs can administer alone
No male alone with female patients. Patients can have
sexual hallucinations with Nitrous
Policy
27. Does not require it’s own procedure note
Nitrous is considered “anxiolysis and analgesia” not
sedation.
Please ensure your scribe does not document
anything about “moderate or deep sedation” as per
typical notes.
Consider documenting “Nitrous Oxide administered
via nurse driven protocol for anxiolysis”
Provider Documentation
28. Mild analgesic/anxiolytic
Nurse driven and administered
Does not require informed consent or “sedation note”
Does have contraindications we should be familiar with
We do not run the equipment but get familiar with it the
next time you are at WestHealth
Peds and ECC providers are only providers credentialed at
WH. Please place supervision note for UC providers.
Take home for providers