Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of electrophysiologic effects of propofol and isoflurane-based anesthetics in children undergoing radiofrequency catheter ablation for supraventricular tachycardia.
Radiofrequency catheter ablation (RFCA), which is typically performed with general anesthesia in children, is an interventional therapy for tachyarrhythmia. Although the electrophysiologic (EP) effects of isoflurane- and propofol-based anesthetics have been shown to be similar, a retrospective analysis reported significantly longer RFCA procedural duration with the use of isoflurane. It remains unclear whether the ability to successfully perform RFCA differs between these drugs. ⋯ Isoflurane- and propofol-based anesthesia were equally suitable in children and adolescents undergoing RFCA.
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There is an unsettled discussion about whether the distribution of local anesthetic is free or inhibited when performing brachial plexus blocks. This is the first study to use magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to help answer this question. ⋯ This study demonstrated that MRI is useful in examining local anesthetic distribution in axillary blocks because it can show the correlation between MRI distribution pattern and clinical effect. The cross-sectional spread of fluid around the brachial-axillary artery was often incomplete-inhibited, and the clinical effect often inadequate.
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As propofol is a high-clearance drug, plasma propofol concentrations can be influenced by cardiac output (CO), which can easily change in response to several factors. If propofol is metabolized in the lungs, the difference between pulmonary and arterial propofol concentrations might also be affected by CO. The objective of the current study was to assess how much plasma propofol concentrations are affected by CO and to determine how much the lungs take part in propofol elimination and in concentration changes affected by CO in anesthetized swine. ⋯ An inverse relation was observed between CO and propofol concentrations. The lungs appear to have a minor effect on plasma propofol concentrations during constant infusion in anesthetized swine.
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The effect of ketamine as a treatment of visceral pain is not known. The current study investigated the effect of ketamine on spinal dorsal horn neurons excited by urinary bladder distension (UBD). The effect of other clinically available N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists on these responses was also studied. ⋯ Intravenous ketamine produces dose-dependent inhibition of the spinal cord neuronal responses evoked by UBD. All three N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists showed selective effects on spinal cord neurons subject to counterirritation. This neurophysiologic evidence supports a spinally mediated analgesic effect of ketamine in this model of urinary bladder nociception, an effect likely caused by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonism.