Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Midlatency auditory evoked potentials and explicit and implicit memory in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
A high incidence of intraoperative awareness during cardiac surgery has been reported. Midlatency auditory evoked potentials (MLAEP) have been used recently as an indicator of awareness. In the current study, memory for information presented during anesthesia was investigated using MLAEP as one experimental indicator in 45 patients scheduled for elective cardiac surgery. ⋯ When the early cortical potentials of MLAEP are preserved during general anesthesia, auditory information may be processed and remembered postoperatively by an implicit memory task.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Epidural anesthesia impairs both central and peripheral thermoregulatory control during general anesthesia.
The authors tested the hypotheses that: (1) the vasoconstriction threshold during combined epidural/general anesthesia is less than that during general anesthesia alone; and (2) after vasoconstriction, core cooling rates during combined epidural/general anesthesia are greater than those during general anesthesia alone. Vasoconstriction thresholds and heat balance were evaluated under controlled circumstances in volunteers, whereas the clinical importance of intraoperative thermoregulatory vasoconstriction was evaluated in patients. ⋯ These data indicate that epidural anesthesia reduces the vasoconstriction threshold during general anesthesia. Furthermore, the markedly reduced rate of core cooling during general anesthesia alone illustrates the importance of leg vasoconstriction in maintaining core temperature.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Recovery characteristics of desflurane versus halothane for maintenance of anesthesia in pediatric ambulatory patients.
Desflurane is a new potent, inhaled anesthetic agent with low blood-gas solubility that should allow for the rapid induction of and emergence from anesthesia. However, its extreme pungency makes desflurane unacceptable for induction of anesthesia in children. This study was undertaken to determine the airway properties of desflurane administered by mask after anesthetic induction with halothane and nitrous oxide, and to compare the emergence and recovery properties of minimum alveolar concentration (MAC)-equivalent concentrations of desflurane or halothane in nitrous oxide in pediatric patients undergoing ambulatory surgery. ⋯ In children premedicated with intranasal midazolam, desflurane maintenance anesthesia allows for a faster recovery. However, depending on the institution's criteria for ambulatory surgical patient discharge, desflurane may or may not affect the overall hospitalization time.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Nitrous oxide in early labor. Safety and analgesic efficacy assessed by a double-blind, placebo-controlled study.
Intermittent self-administered nitrous oxide has long had widespread use as an analgesic in labor, but its efficacy has not been adequately established. Questions about its effect on maternal oxygenation between labor contractions also have been raised. ⋯ While intermittent self-administered 50% nitrous oxide in oxygen does not appear to predispose parturient women to hemoglobin oxygen desaturation, its analgesic effect has yet to be clearly demonstrated.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Nifedipine and intraoperative core body temperature in humans.
Initial anesthetic-induced hypothermia results largely from core-to-peripheral redistribution of heat. Nifedipine administration may minimize hypothermia by inducing vasodilation well before induction of anesthesia. Although vasodilation would redistribute heat to peripheral tissues, thermoregulatory responses would maintain core temperature. After equilibration, the patient would be left vasodilated, with a small core-to-peripheral temperature gradient. Minimal redistribution hypothermia may accompany subsequent induction of anesthesia, because heat flow requires a temperature gradient. In contrast, similar vasodilation concurrent with anesthetic-induced vasodilation may augment redistribution hypothermia. Accordingly, the authors tested the hypothesis that nifedipine treatment for 12 h before surgery would minimize intraoperative redistribution hypothermia, whereas nifedipine treatment immediately before induction of anesthesia would aggravate hypothermia. ⋯ Vasodilation induced by nifedipine well before induction of anesthesia minimized redistribution hypothermia, presumably by decreasing the core-to-peripheral tissue temperature gradient. In contrast, redistribution hypothermia was aggravated by administration of the same drug immediately before induction of anesthesia. Drug-induced modulation of vascular tone thus produces clinically important alterations in intraoperative core temperature.