Anesthesiology
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Titration of volatile anesthetics using bispectral index facilitates recovery after ambulatory anesthesia.
The bispectral (BIS) index has previously been shown to be a quantifiable measure of the sedative and hypnotic effects of anesthetic drugs. This study was designed to assess the effect of BIS monitoring on the utilization of volatile anesthetics and their recovery profiles after ambulatory surgery. ⋯ Titrating desflurane and sevoflurane using the BIS monitor decreased their utilization and contributed to a faster emergence from anesthesia in outpatients undergoing laparoscopic tubal ligation procedures.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Effects of rapid increases of desflurane and sevoflurane to concentrations of 1.5 MAC on systemic vascular resistance and catecholamine response during cardiopulmonary bypass.
Airway irritation was hypothesized to trigger the transient cardiovascular stimulation associated with desflurane. The authors administered desflurane during cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), thus avoiding airway contact, and compared the effects of rapid increases of desflurane to 1.5 MAC on systemic vascular resistance index (SVRI) and catecholamine response to those of 1.5 MAC sevoflurane. ⋯ The authors' results indicate that desflurane is associated with a different hemodynamic and catecholamine response compared with sevoflurane when administered into the oxygenator's gas supply line during CPB.
-
Inhaled nitric oxide (NO) improves arterial oxygenation in patients with acute lung injury (ALI) by selectively dilating pulmonary vessels perfusing ventilated lung areas. It can be hypothesized that NO uptake from the lung decreases with increasing ventilation perfusion mismatch. This study was undertaken to determine the factors influencing the fluctuation of tracheal NO concentration over the respiratory cycle as an index of NO pulmonary uptake in patients with ALI. ⋯ In patients with ALI, fluctuation of tracheal NO concentration over the respiratory cycle can be considered as an index of NO uptake from the lungs that depends on aerated lung volume and perfusion of ventilated lung areas. At bedside, it may be used to follow the evolution of ventilation-perfusion mismatch.
-
Patient satisfaction is one of the variables that affect the outcome of health care and the use of health-care services. As more procedures are performed on an ambulatory basis, the role of the anesthesiologist becomes more important. To improve the delivery of care, the predictors of dissatisfaction with the entire process (global dissatisfaction) of ambulatory surgery and with anesthesia itself must be identified. The authors conducted a hypothesis-generating study to identify predictors; specifically, they hypothesized that satisfaction with anesthesia was a predictor of global satisfaction with ambulatory surgery and that 24-h postoperative symptoms were a predictor of satisfaction with anesthesia. ⋯ Dissatisfaction with anesthesia is a predictor of global dissatisfaction with ambulatory surgery. An increasing number of symptoms 24 h after operation is a predictor of dissatisfaction with anesthesia. The rate of global dissatisfaction and anesthesia dissatisfaction is very low. The predictors from this model need to be validated by a second data set from either this or another center. Given the low rate of dissatisfaction, a focused study testing specific interventions to improve patient satisfaction would be difficult.
-
The authors investigated the effects of intravenous anesthetics on alpha-adrenergic-induced oscillations in intracellular free calcium concentration ([Ca2+]i) in individual pulmonary artery smooth muscle cells (PASMCs). ⋯ Ketamine, thiopental, and propofol exerted differential effects to inhibit the amplitude or the frequency of phenylephrine-induced [Ca2+]i oscillations in individual PASMCs. Thus, intravenous anesthetics may alter the pulmonary vascular response to alpha-adrenoreceptor activation by directly inhibiting [Ca2+]i signaling in PASMCs.