Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Arrhythmogenic doses of epinephrine are similar during desflurane or isoflurane anesthesia in humans.
Inhaled anesthetics can alter the arrhythmogenicity of exogenously administered epinephrine. Although swine anesthetized with desflurane or isoflurane do not differ in their arrhythmic response to exogenous epinephrine, the relative effect of epinephrine in the presence of these anesthetics in humans is untested. ⋯ The authors concluded that isoflurane and desflurane do not differ in their sensitization of human myocardium to the arrhythmogenic effects of exogenously administered epinephrine.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Epidural versus intravenous fentanyl for reducing hormonal, metabolic, and physiologic responses after thoracotomy.
Previous attempts to prevent all the unwanted postoperative responses to major surgery with an epidural hydrophilic opioid, morphine, have not succeeded. The authors' hypothesis was that the lipophilic opioid fentanyl, infused epidurally close to the spinal-cord opioid receptors corresponding to the dermatome of the surgical incision, gives equal pain relief but attenuates postoperative hormonal and metabolic responses more effectively than does systemic fentanyl. ⋯ The authors' results indicate that some aspects of the hormonal response to surgery are blocked more completely with epidural than with intravenous fentanyl. Adequate pain relief with epidural fentanyl, with a smaller mean dose, led to a smaller increase of some hormonal, metabolic, and physiologic responses after thoracotomy than in association with the adequate pain relief provided by intravenous fentanyl.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Dose-response relationships for edrophonium and neostigmine antagonism of rocuronium bromide (ORG 9426)-induced neuromuscular blockade.
Rocuronium bromide (ORG 9426) is a new nondepolarizing muscle relaxant with a rapid onset but an intermediate duration of action. The dose-response relationships for neostigmine and edrophonium were studied during antagonism of neuromuscular block induced by rocuronium bromide. ⋯ Under the conditions described in this study, if reversal was attempted at 10% first twitch recovery, edrophonium was less capable than neostigmine of reversing fade (potency ratio of 19.2 and 27.5 at 5 and 10 min, respectively) than first twitch (potency ratio of 6.7 and 9.5 at 5 and 10 min, respectively) during antagonism of rocuronium bromide-induced blockade. Edrophonium was found to be less effective than neostigmine at reversing rocuronium bromide-induced TOF fade.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Desflurane and isoflurane have similar effects on cerebral blood flow in patients with intracranial mass lesions.
Before desflurane is advocated for patients undergoing neurosurgical procedures, it is necessary to determine the effect of desflurane on cerebral blood flow (CBF). In this study, CBF values are compared between desflurane and isoflurane at two doses. In addition, CBF reactivity to CO2 and the effect of prolonged exposure were compared between the two agents. ⋯ Desflurane and isoflurane are similar in terms of absolute CBF, the response to increasing doses, and the preservation of CO2 reactivity.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Intravenous or epidural clonidine for intra- and postoperative analgesia.
Intravenous and epidural clonidine both produce postoperative analgesia. Several experimental reports demonstrate a spinal site of action for the analgesic effects of this alpha 2-adrenoceptor agonist. Therefore, the authors evaluated the clinical analgesic benefits of using clonidine, both intra- and postoperatively, by the epidural or the intravenous route. ⋯ Epidural clonidine reduces the intra- and early postoperative analgesic requirements when compared with the same dose given by the intravenous route. The side effects were similar with the two routes of administration.