Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study
Intrathecal gabapentin to treat chronic intractable noncancer pain.
Oral gabapentin is approved as an anticonvulsant medication and to treat postherpetic neuralgia. Its nonopioid properties and presumed spinal site of analgesic action made the study on intrathecal gabapentin attractive to establish the minimum effective dose for a later, pivotal trial. ⋯ Twenty-two days of intrathecal gabapentin did not demonstrate statistically significant or clinically meaningful analgesic effects. The study sponsor has no current plans for further studies. Drug-related adverse events were similar to those for oral gabapentin. Most device-related adverse events resulted from the implant surgery or anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
Changes in Blood Pressure and Cardiac Output during Cesarean Delivery: The Effects of Oxytocin and Carbetocin Compared with Placebo.
Little is known about maternal hemodynamics after Cesarean delivery. Uterine contractions may increase cardiac output. Oxytocin is the first-line treatment for uterine atony, although the effects of the long-acting oxytocin analogue carbetocin are comparable with that of oxytocin. The authors analyzed the effects of i.v. oxytocin 5 U, carbetocin 100 µg, and placebo on hemodynamics, uterine tone, adverse events, and blood loss after Cesarean delivery. ⋯ The hemodynamic side effects of oxytocin 5 U and carbetocin 100 µg were comparable. The lack of an increase in stroke volume in the placebo group challenges the theory that uterine contraction causes autotransfusion of uterine blood, leading to an increase in preload.