Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Effect of epidural clonidine on analgesia and pharmacokinetics of epidural fentanyl in postoperative patients.
Epidural clonidine produces postoperative analgesia in patients and potentiates opioid analgesia in animals. The aim of the current study was to assess the effect of epidural clonidine on the plasma concentrations and analgesic effect of fentanyl after epidural administration. Twenty ASA physical status 2 or 3 patients recovering from abdominal surgery were allocated randomly to receive either epidural fentanyl (100 micrograms in 10 ml isotonic saline; EF group) or epidural fentanyl (same dose) plus epidural clonidine (150 micrograms; EF + C group) in isotonic saline solution. ⋯ Peak plasma fentanyl concentrations (Fmax) and the time to reach Cmax (Tmax) were comparable in the two groups (0.29 +/- 0.15 ng.ml-1 at 16.2 +/- 14.8 min in the EF group and 0.27 +/- 0.11 ng.ml-1 at 8.3 +/- 5.5 min in the EF + C group), as were plasma concentrations at each definite time of measurement. Drowsiness and hypotension were noticed in the EF + C group. Thus, epidural clonidine appears to prolong epidural fentanyl analgesia without affecting its plasma concentration.
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Comparative Study
The automated interview versus the personal interview. Do patient responses to preoperative health questions differ?
Laboratory testing of presurgical patients has been shown to be excessive, thereby increasing costs, reducing resources for other health care uses, and increasing risks to both patients and physicians. As one step toward reducing the number of unnecessary preoperative tests ordered, we used an automated method to aid preoperative assessment of 239 patients in Chicago and in Winnipeg. The "HealthQuiz," a small hand-held device containing a computer chip and video screen, uses a decision tree to ask a minimum of 60 health-related questions (the patient's response to certain questions determines the number of questions presented). ⋯ Patient's answers to the HealthQuiz were compared with their responses to a randomly selected set of the same questions in a personal interview. Ninety-seven percent of the response pairs were identical, and most of the 3% that differed involved changes from "not sure" replies to the HealthQuiz. Laboratory tests suggested by responses to the two methods of questioning did not differ.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Fetal heart rate after epidural lidocaine and bupivacaine for elective cesarean section.
This prospective double-blind study was designed to determine whether the fetal heart rate (FHR) changes that have been reported after epidural administration of bupivacaine and lidocaine during labor are present when larger doses of these drugs are given during elective cesarean section. Prior to inserting an epidural catheter, FHR and maternal vital signs were monitored during a control period in 60 healthy term parturients. Patients were randomly assigned to receive either 0.5% bupivacaine with 0.1 mEq sodium bicarbonate added to each 20 ml (n = 30) or 2% lidocaine with 1:300,000 epinephrine (n = 30). ⋯ The groups were similar with respect to maternal characteristics, onset of surgical anesthesia, time to delivery, and uterine incision-delivery interval. Maternal blood pressure decreased from control values in both groups (P less than 0.05), but there was no difference between the groups in either the incidence of hypotension or ephedrine requirements. Analysis of FHR tracings by a perinatologist blinded to the study group revealed no changes after anesthesia and no significant differences between the groups at any time in basal FHR, short- or long-term variability, or the incidence of accelerations or decelerations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Measurement of pulmonary blood flow with transesophageal two-dimensional and Doppler echocardiography.
Transesophageal echocardiography permits measurement of the pulmonary artery diameter (two-dimensional echocardiography) and pulmonary artery blood flow velocity (pulsed-wave Doppler). These measurements considered with the heart rate allow for the determination of pulmonary artery blood flow, which is equivalent to cardiac output. This study compared the precision of transesophageal Doppler-derived cardiac output (DdCO) with the precision of thermodilution cardiac output (TdCO) and examined the agreement between DdCO and TdCO in 33 cardiac surgical patients. ⋯ A total of 45 sets of triplicate measurements were made. The range of cardiac outputs encountered was 1.7-6.6 l.min-1 by TdCO and 1.5-6.9 l.min-1 by DdCO. The 95% confidence limits for the difference between the two methods (agreement) was 0.030 +/- 0.987 l.min-1.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)