Anesthesiology
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Train-of-four (TOF) monitoring of neuromuscular block at submaximal current stimulation has been recommended because it is less painful than monitoring at supramaximal stimulation. The measurement error, however, when using submaximal stimulation has not as yet been fully elucidated. The authors therefore quantified the measurement error of TOF monitoring at low currents near the initial threshold for stimulation (ITS) by assessing precision (the difference between duplicated TOF ratios measured at the same current) and accuracy (the difference between TOF ratios at lesser currents and the TOF ratio at 58 mA, which served as the reference standard method). ⋯ Whereas there were no statistical significant differences between the mean TOF ratios at the different currents, the standard deviation increased with decreasing currents (P less than 0.01 at currents less than 40 mA). The precision was acceptable except at ITS, where the limits of precision (mean intracurrent difference in TOF ratio +/- two standard deviations) exceeded 0.05, which was the chosen acceptable difference. The standard deviation of the accuracy was significantly increased at currents less than or equal to ITS + 25 mA (P less than 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Claims against anesthesiologists for eye injuries were analyzed as part of the ASA Closed Claims Project. Eye injury occurred in 3% of all claims in the database (71 of 2,046). The payment frequency for eye injury claims was higher than that for non-eye injury claims (70% vs. 56%; P less than or equal to 0.05). ⋯ The median payment for claim involving movement was 10 times greater than for non-movement claims ($90,000 vs. $9,000; P less than or equal to 0.01). Anesthesiologist reviewers deemed the care rendered in the general anesthesia "movement" claims as meeting standards in only 19% of claims. From the perspective of patient safety, as well as risk management, these data suggest two specific needs: research directed at better understanding of the etiology of corneal abrasion and clinical strategies designed to assure patient immobility during ophthalmic surgery.
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Epidural or intrathecal infusions of morphine and bupivacaine mixtures are presently used for the treatment of "refractory" cancer pain even though the neurotoxic potential of such mixtures is unknown. The pathologic findings of the spinal column, the meninges, the nerve roots, and the spinal cord, and the clinical neurologic deficits were recorded in 15 patients (5 men and 10 women), aged 26-83 (median 68) yr, treated for 4-274 (median 81) days with intrathecal infusions of morphine (with preservatives [sodium metabisulfite and sodium edetate]) and bupivacaine mixtures, given through open, subcutaneously tunneled nylon catheters. Six patients had been subjected to radiation therapy (20-96 Gy), applied over the spinal column, and four had been treated with antineoplastics believed to be neurotoxic. ⋯ The neuropathologic findings were not related to the duration or cumulative doses of the intrathecal treatment. No new neurologic deficits that could be attributed to the intrathecal administration of the opiate-bupivacaine mixtures were recorded. The neuropathologic and clinical neurologic findings in cancer patients treated with intrathecal morphine-bupivacaine mixtures appeared similar to those in animals and humans reported with either intrathecal morphine or bupivacaine alone.