%0 Journal Article %T Atropine for Critical Care Intubation in a Cohort of 264 Children and Reduced Mortality Unrelated to Effects on Bradycardia %A Peter Jones %A Mark J. Peters %A Nathalia Pinto da Costa %A Tobias Kurth %A Corinne Alberti %A Katia Kessous %A Noella Lode %A Stephane Dauger %J PLOS ONE %D 2013 %I Public Library of Science (PLoS) %R 10.1371/journal.pone.0057478 %X Background Atropine has is currently recommended to facilitate haemodynamic stability during critical care intubation. Our objective was to determine whether atropine use at induction influences ICU mortality. Methodology/Principal Findings A 2-year prospective, observational study of all first non-planned intubations, September 2007每9 in PICU and Intensive Care Transport team of Hˋpital Robert Debr谷, Paris, 4 other PICUs and 5 NICUs in the Paris Region, France. Follow-up was from intubation to ICU discharge. A propensity score was used to adjust for patient specific characteristics influencing atropine prescription. 264/333 (79%) intubations were included. The unadjusted ICU mortality was 7.2% (9/124) for those who received atropine compared to 15.7% (22/140) for those who did not (OR 0.42, 95%CI 0.19每0.95, p = 0.04). One child died during intubation (1/264, 0.4%). Two age sub-groups of neonates (≒28 days) and older children (>28 days, <8 years) were examined. This difference in mortality arose from the higher mortality in children aged over one month when atropine was not used (propensity score adjusted OR 0.22, 95%CI 0.06每0.85, p = 0.028). No effect was seen in neonates (propensity score adjusted OR 1.3, 95%CI 0.31每5.1 p = 0.74). Using the propensity score, atropine maintained the mean heart rate 45.9 bpm above that observed when no atropine was used in neonates (95%CI 34.3每57.5, p<0.001) and 43.5 bpm for older children (95%CI 25.5每61.5 bpm, p<0.001). Conclusions/Significance Atropine use during induction was associated with a reduction in ICU mortality in children over one month. This effect is independent of atropine*s capacity to attenuate bradycardia during intubation which occurred similarly in neonates and older children. This result needs to be confirmed in a study using randomised methodology. %U http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0057478