Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Renal responses to low-flow desflurane, sevoflurane, and propofol in patients.
The contributing factors that result in significant, postoperative proteinuria and glucosuria after low-flow isoflurane and sevoflurane anesthesia are unknown. The present study compared renal responses after anesthesia with desflurane (negligible metabolism), sevoflurane, or intravenous propofol. ⋯ Alterations in postoperative renal function were common and unrelated to the choice of anesthetic. These findings implicate nonanesthetic factors in producing changes in biochemical indices of renal excretory function.
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Multicenter Study
Effect of renal failure and cirrhosis on the pharmacokinetics and neuromuscular effects of rapacuronium administered by bolus followed by infusion.
Recent trials indicate that rapacuronium's pharmacokinetic characteristics are influenced by both renal failure and cirrhosis but the time course of a single bolus dose of 1.5 mg/kg is affected minimally. The authors reassessed these pharmacokinetic findings and examined the time course of the same bolus dose followed by a 30-min infusion. ⋯ Rapacuronium's plasma clearance and infusion requirement were decreased by renal failure. By dosing to maintain target twitch depression, recovery was not prolonged. Cirrhosis does not affect the pharmacokinetics or neuromuscular effects of rapacuronium. Persistence of ORG9488 in patients with renal failure might prolong recovery after rapacuronium if target twitch depression is not maintained or with administration of rapacuronium for more than 30 min.