PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

No sign of toxic effects of inhaled anesthesia in young children

Study provides further evidence to alleviate concern about anesthesia and brain development

2025-09-09
(Press-News.org) CHICAGO – Preliminary findings from a new clinical trial show no adverse neurodevelopmental effects after brief inhaled anesthesia and surgery in infants and young children, reports the Online First edition of Anesthesiology, the peer-reviewed medical journal of the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA). 

A "balanced" strategy using a lower dose of the inhaled anesthetic sevoflurane did not lead to meaningful short-term differences in IQ or child behavior problems, according to the study by Ji-Hyun Lee, M.D., Ph.D., of Seoul National University Hospital, Republic of Korea, and colleagues. "These findings support existing evidence suggesting that brief anesthetic exposure is unlikely to result in clinically significant neurodevelopmental impairment," the researchers wrote. 

Animal studies have raised concerns about possible neurotoxic effects of general anesthetic or sedative drugs in young children. In response, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration issued warnings in 2017 that long-lasting or repeated exposure to these drugs "may negatively affect brain development in children younger than 3 years."  

Randomized clinical trials – in which participants are randomly assigned to different treatment groups – are the best way to assess these safety concerns. One previous randomized trial (the GAS study) found normal neurodevelopmental outcomes in children receiving sevoflurane. However, that study was published several years ago and evaluated an alternative approach (awake regional anesthesia) that is not widely available.  

To address this research gap, Dr. Lee and colleagues designed a clinical trial including 400 children under two years of age undergoing one-time surgery with general anesthesia. Patients were randomly assigned to anesthesia with inhaled sevoflurane alone or a balanced strategy using an intravenous sedative (dexmedetomidine) and a short-acting opioid (remifentanil). The balanced strategy was designed to reduce the amount of sevoflurane needed to maintain anesthesia during surgery. In both groups, anesthesia exposure was brief, with surgery lasting less than 90 minutes.  

When the patients were approximately 30 months old, the researchers assessed neurodevelopmental outcomes using a nonverbal intelligence test and a parent-reported child behavior scale. If outcomes were better with the balanced strategy, it could mean that the lower dose of sevoflurane was less neurotoxic. The analysis included complete data on 343 children. 

The results showed little or no difference in outcomes for children receiving sevoflurane alone compared to the balanced strategy. Overall IQ and behavioral scores were similar between the groups. Measures of language development were comparable as well. 

Although the balanced approach "effectively reduced sevoflurane requirements during surgery, it did not provide measurable developmental advantages," Dr. Lee and coauthors wrote. They emphasize that their results are preliminary; final results will include long-term follow-up at five years old, including full-scale IQ assessment. In the meantime, the findings provide reassurance that one-time general anesthesia does not adversely affect neurodevelopmental outcomes in infants and young children who require surgery. 

The new study is "a welcome and important addition" in an area where definitive evidence is difficult to obtain, according to an accompanying editorial by Andrew Davidson, MBBS, M.D., and Caleb Ing, M.D., MS. They discuss the challenges of studying this complex issue – including the fact that children who require surgery may have other health issues affecting neurodevelopmental outcomes. 

As anesthesiologists and parents await the results of long-term follow-up and future clinical trials, the new findings “are incredibly helpful in consolidating knowledge” on the safety of inhaled anesthesia in young children, Drs. Davidson and Ing wrote. They conclude: "[T]he lack of an effect of differing sevoflurane dose on neurodevelopment may argue against sevoflurane being a cause of neurotoxicity."  

The ASA has further information for parents of children undergoing surgery and anesthesia.  

THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF ANESTHESIOLOGISTS 
Founded in 1905, the American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) is an educational, research and scientific society with more than 59,000 members organized to advance the medical practice of anesthesiology and secure its future. ASA is committed to ensuring anesthesiologists evaluate and supervise the medical care of all patients before, during, and after surgery. ASA members also lead the care of critically ill patients in intensive care units, as well as treat pain in both acute and chronic settings. 

For more information on the field of anesthesiology, visit the American Society of Anesthesiologists online at asahq.org. To learn more about how anesthesiologists help ensure patient safety, visit asahq.org/madeforthismoment.  Follow ASA on Facebook, X, Instagram, Bluesky, and LinkedIn. 

Follow Anesthesiology on X/Twitter at @_Anesthesiology, on Facebook, or on Instagram. 

# # # 

CONTACT: 

LaSandra Cooper

Associate Director of Public Relations 
American Society of Anesthesiologists 
C: 847-268-9106 
l.cooper@asahq.org 

END



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

CUNY SPH expands curriculum with concentration in sexual and reproductive justice and health

2025-09-09
New York, NY | Sept. 9, 2025: Beginning January 2026, the CUNY Graduate School of Public Health and Health Policy (CUNY SPH) will offer a new master of public health (MPH) concentration in sexual and reproductive justice and health (SRJH). Building on the school’s longstanding commitment to equity, the concentration expands and deepens opportunities for students to engage with sexual and reproductive health through a justice-centered, interdisciplinary lens. As part of the Department of Community ...

High consumption of ultra-processed foods linked to systemic inflammation

2025-09-09
Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) are industrially altered products – like soda, snacks and processed meats – packed with additives and stripped of nutrients. Hundreds of new ingredients, previously unknown to the human body, now make up nearly 60% of the average adult’s diet and almost 70% of children’s diets in the United States. These products reduce nutritional value, extend shelf life, and tend to increase how much people consume. In the U.S., UPFs account for about 60% of daily calorie ...

City of Hope launches transformative national clinical trials model to accelerate cancer research

2025-09-09
LOS ANGELES — City of Hope®, one of the largest and most advanced cancer research and treatment organizations in the U.S., launched an innovative national clinical trials model to expand access to emerging life-saving cancer treatments to more patients across the country. This model simplifies the opening of new trial locations and streamlines patient enrollment with the goal of accelerating the development of new cancer treatments and improving clinical care.   As the first academic center with a national clinical trial network and a large and diverse patient ...

Inside an academic scandal: a story of fraud and betrayal

2025-09-09
In 2012 Max Bazerman, along with four coauthors, published an influential paper showing that “signing first”—that is, promising to tell the truth before filling out a form—produced greater honesty than signing afterward. In 2021, academic sleuths revealed that two of the experiments in the paper were fraudulent, triggering what would become one of the most significant academic frauds of the twenty-first century. In Inside an Academic Scandal, Bazerman tells the sobering story of how fraud in a published paper about inducing honesty upended countless academic careers, wreaked havoc in organizations ...

Innovative ultrasonic regeneration restores nano-phase change emulsions for low-temperature applications

2025-09-09
Phase change emulsions (NPCEs) have significant potential for energy storage and temperature regulation due to their high energy density and efficient heat transfer. However, in most conventional NPCEs, performance under low-temperature and shear conditions is often compromised, leading to droplet coalescence and instability. A team of scientists has developed a high-energy ultrasonic regeneration strategy that enables real-time restoration of NPCE performance without interrupting the operation cycle. Their work was published in the journal Industrial Chemistry & Materials on July 28. “We aim to develop a robust emulsion system that can withstand ...

Targeted snow monitoring at hotspots outperforms basin-wide surveys in predicting water supply

2025-09-09
CORVALLIS, Ore. – Measuring mountain snowpack at strategically selected hotspots consistently outperforms broader basin-wide mapping in predicting water supply in the western United States, a new study found. Researchers analyzed more than 20 years of snow estimates and streamflow data across 390 snow-fed basins in 11 western states to evaluate two potential strategies for expanded snow monitoring. This analysis revealed locations the researchers are calling hotspots — localized areas ...

Decades-old barrels of industrial waste still impacting ocean floor off Los Angeles

2025-09-09
In 2020, haunting images of corroded metal barrels in the deep ocean off Los Angeles leapt into the public consciousness. Initially linked to the toxic pesticide DDT, some barrels were encircled by ghostly halos in the sediment. It was unclear whether the barrels contained DDT waste, leaving the barrels’ contents and the eerie halos unexplained. Now, new research from UC San Diego's Scripps Institution of Oceanography reveals that the barrels with halos contained caustic alkaline ...

Finalists announced for the 2025 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists

2025-09-09
September 9, 2025 – New York – The Blavatnik Family Foundation and The New York Academy of Sciences today announced the Finalists for the 2025 Blavatnik National Awards for Young Scientists. The Awards recognize scientific advances made by researchers in the United States across the following disciplines: Life Sciences, Chemical Sciences, and Physical Sciences & Engineering.   Subra Suresh, ScD, Former Director of the National Science Foundation and current President of the Global Learning Council in Switzerland, will announce the three 2025 ...

Alkali waste dumped in the Pacific Ocean created alkalophilic ecosystems

2025-09-09
Barrels filled with industrial waste that were dumped in the sea near Los Angeles more than 50 years ago are creating new microbial ecosystems adapted to highly alkaline conditions. It has been estimated that hundreds of thousands of barrels of waste were dumped off the coast of California in the mid 20th century. Previous investigations suggested that the barrels once contained dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane (DDT)—an insecticide known for its broad toxicity that was banned for agricultural use in 1972. ...

Bacterial ink to restore coral reefs

2025-09-09
A living ink containing bacteria attracts coral larvae and could help rebuild reefs. Corals are struggling with water pollution, as well as warming and acidification caused by climate change. One way to support coral reef persistence is to encourage coral recruitment onto the reef. Coral larvae are free-swimming animals that eventually settle onto a surface and transform into a polyp with a hard, durable body. Certain bacteria secrete chemical cues that stimulate settlement and metamorphosis. Settled polyps may then reproduce asexually, expanding the size of the reef. Daniel Wangpraseurt and colleagues created a living material that encourages coral larvae to attach ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Global and European experts convene in Warsaw for Europe’s leading public health conference on infectious diseases

How do winter-active spiders survive the cold?

Did US cities’ indoor vaccine mandates affect COVID-19 vaccination rates and outcomes?

How does adoption of artificial intelligence affect employees’ job satisfaction?

Can social media help clarify the threat domestic cats pose to insect and spider populations?

All-you-can-eat: Young adults and ultra-processed foods

MRC Laboratory of Medical Sciences (LMS) awarded £1 million to boost life science partnerships in White City

KIMM launches initiative to establish a regional hub for mechanical researcher in Asia

AMI warns that the threat of antimicrobial resistance in viruses and other pathogens cannot be underestimated

As ‘California sober’ catches on, study suggests cannabis use reduces short-term alcohol consumption

Working with local communities to manage green spaces could help biodiversity crisis, new study finds

Parental monitoring is linked to fewer teen conduct problems despite genetic risk

From stadiums to cyberspace: How the metaverse will redefine sports fandom 

The hidden rule behind ignition — An analytic law governing multi-shock implosions for ultrahigh compression

Can AI help us predict earthquakes?

Teaching models to cope with messy medical data

Significant interest in vegan pet diets revealed by largest surveys to date

A new method for the synthesis of giant fullerenes

National team works to curb costly infrastructure corrosion

A ‘magic bullet’ for polycystic kidney disease in the making

Biochar boosts clean energy output from food waste in novel two-stage digestion system

Seismic sensors used to identify types of aircraft flying over Alaska

The Lancet: Experts warn global rise in ultra-processed foods poses major public health threat; call for worldwide policy reform

Health impacts of eating disorders complex and long-lasting

Ape ancestors and Neanderthals likely kissed, new analysis finds

Ancient bogs reveal 15,000-year climate secret, say scientists

Study shows investing in engaging healthcare teams is essential for improving patient experience

New pika research finds troubling signs for the iconic Rocky Mountain animal

Seismic data can identify aircraft by type

Just cutting down doesn’t cut it when it comes to the impact of smoking on your health

[Press-News.org] No sign of toxic effects of inhaled anesthesia in young children
Study provides further evidence to alleviate concern about anesthesia and brain development