Anesthesiology
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In upper abdominal or chest surgery, the segmental approach to thoracic epidural space has the advantage of reducing the total dose of local anesthetic needed. This approach, however, is associated with greater risk of neurologic damage or dural puncture. The aim of this study was to assess the success and the degree of difficulty in advancing a 19-G catheter from the lumbar epidural space to the thoracic level in patients aged 0-96 months. ⋯ The 19-G catheter is inappropriate for use in reaching the thoracic epidural space by the lumbar approach. Easy entrance of a catheter is not a reliable sign of having reached the desired level.
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The chemical breakdown of isoflurane, enflurane, or desflurane in dried carbon dioxide absorbents may produce carbon monoxide. Some mass spectrometers can give false indications of enflurane during anesthetic breakdown. ⋯ Trifluoromethane causes the inappropriate indication of enflurane by mass spectrometry, and indicates isoflurane and desflurane breakdown. Because the ratio of carbon monoxide to trifluoromethane varies with conditions, this technique cannot be used to quantitatively determine the amount of carbon monoxide to which a patient is exposed. If any warning of anesthetic breakdown results from this technique then remedial steps should be taken immediately to stop patient exposure to carbon monoxide. No warning can be provided for the breakdown of enflurane by this technique.
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Administration of serotonin2 (5-HT2) receptor agonists in pigs triggers malignant hyperthermia (MH) and psychotic-like behavior. Both can be reduced by 5-HT2 receptor antagonists. Furthermore, an increase in the plasma concentration of 5-HT has been found during onset of halothane-induced MH in pigs. Therefore, in this study, the in vitro effects of the 5-HT2 receptor agonist 1-(2,5-dimethoxy-4-iodophenyl)-2-aminopropane (DOI) were investigated in muscle specimens from MH-susceptible (MHS) and -negative (MHN) patients. ⋯ A functional or structural altered serotonin system might be involved in the development of MH in humans.
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Clinically, differential block is manifested by the loss of small fiber mediated sensation (e.g., temperature) two or more dermatomes beyond the sensory limit for large fiber mediated sensations. These observations support the belief that sensitivity to local anesthetics is inversely proportional to axon diameter. This study reports the first measurements of differential sensitivity to lidocaine in individual myelinated and unmyelinated mammalian dorsal root axons. ⋯ Although no difference in sensitivity to the conduction blocking effects of lidocaine could be demonstrated among dorsal root axons, myelinated axons were more sensitive to the conduction velocity slowing effects of lidocaine. This differential effect cannot explain clinical observations of differential nerve block. Differential sensory block with lidocaine may depend on factors (e.g., physiologic function) related only indirectly to individual axon conduction velocity (diameter).
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Prophylactic use of epidural mepivacaine/morphine, systemic diclofenac, and metamizole reduces postoperative morphine consumption after major abdominal surgery.
Surgical trauma induces nociceptive sensitization leading to amplification and prolongation of postoperative pain. While preemptive analgesic treatment with numerous agents has been successful in experimental animals, results of human studies remain conflicting. The authors used a multimodal approach for preemptive analgesia before abdominal surgery: diclofenac and metamizole inhibit prostaglandin synthesis, thus influencing peripheral sensitization; epidural local anesthetics induce conduction block, epidural opioids inhibit nociceptive synaptic transmission, and metamizole induces descending inhibition. The interaction of these drugs might suppress spinal nociceptive sensitization and postoperative analgesic demand. ⋯ A significant reduction of patient controlled analgesia requirements could be achieved by our preincisional balanced analgesia regimen compared to application before wound closure. The more distinct difference between patients receiving balanced analgesia and those in the control group is based on the analgesic action of the study substances, which lasted about 14 h.