MIDAZOLAM 

MECHANISM OF ACTION

  • Acts on GABA-A receptor
  • Enhances frequency of chloride channel opening neuronal hyperpolarization

Effects:

  • Sedation
  • Hypnosis
  • Anxiolysis
  • Anticonvulsant action
  • Anterograde amnesia

PHARMACOKINETICS

1. Absorption

  • IV (most common in ICU)
  • IM, oral, intranasal (procedural use)

2. Distribution

  • Highly lipophilic
  • Rapid CNS penetration quick onset
  • Protein bound (~95%)

3. Metabolism

  • Hepatic via Cytochrome P450 3A4
  • Active metabolite: 1-hydroxymidazolam

4. Elimination

  • Renal excretion (as conjugates)

Context-Sensitive Half-Time

  • Short after single dose
  • Markedly prolonged in infusion
    • Accumulation in:
      • Renal failure
      • Hepatic failure
      • Obesity
      • Elderly

Midazolam unpredictable awakening in prolonged ICU sedation


PHARMACODYNAMICS

Effect

Mechanism

Sedation

GABA potentiation

Respiratory depression

Dose-dependent CNS depression

Hypotension

SVR, mild myocardial depression

Amnesia

Hippocampal effect

ICU INDICATIONS

1. Sedation in Mechanically Ventilated Patients

  • Short-term sedation
  • When hemodynamic instability present (relative advantage vs propofol)

2. Status Epilepticus

  • IV bolus or infusion
  • Alternative to diazepam/lorazepam

3. Procedural Sedation

  • Intubation
  • Central line insertion
  • Bronchoscopy

4. Alcohol Withdrawal

  • Severe cases (DTs)

DOSING (ICU)

Bolus

  • 0.01–0.05 mg/kg IV

Infusion

  • 0.02–0.1 mg/kg/hr

 Titrate to sedation target:

  • RASS: −2 to 0 (preferred modern target)

 ADVERSE EFFECTS

 Respiratory

  • Respiratory depression
  • Apnea (especially with opioids)

 Cardiovascular

  • Hypotension (more in hypovolemia)

 Neurological

  • Delirium (important ICU issue)
  • Prolonged sedation
  • Withdrawal syndrome

 Metabolic

  • Accumulation delayed awakening

 ICU DELIRIUM & SEDATION CONTROVERSY

According to:

  • Society of Critical Care Medicine PADIS Guidelines (2018)

Recommendations:

 Avoid benzodiazepines (including midazolam) for routine sedation
 Prefer:

  • Propofol
  • Dexmedetomidine

 Why?

  • ICU delirium
  • ventilator days
  • ICU stay

WITHDRAWAL & TOLERANCE

Seen in:

  • Prolonged infusion (>5–7 days)

Features:

  • Agitation
  • Tachycardia
  • Hypertension
  • Seizures

 Prevention:

  • Gradual taper
  • Switch to longer-acting benzo (e.g., diazepam)

 CONTRAINDICATIONS / CAUTION

  • Severe respiratory depression
  • Shock (relative)
  • Hepatic failure
  • Renal failure (metabolite accumulation)
  • Elderly (increased sensitivity)

 REVERSAL AGENT

 Flumazenil

Mechanism:

  • Competitive antagonist at GABA-A receptor

Dose:

  • 0.2 mg IV increments

 Risks:

  • Seizures (especially in chronic benzo users)

 MIDAZOLAM VS OTHER ICU SEDATIVES

Feature

Midazolam

Propofol

Dexmedetomidine

Onset

Rapid

Very rapid

Moderate

Duration

Variable (accumulates)

Short

Short

Delirium

High

Low

Lowest

Hemodynamics

Stable-ish

Hypotension

Bradycardia

Use

Limited now

First-line

First-line