Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A prospective, comparative trial of three anesthetics for elective supratentorial craniotomy. Propofol/fentanyl, isoflurane/nitrous oxide, and fentanyl/nitrous oxide.
Different anesthetic agents have different effects on cerebrovascular physiology. However, the importance of these differences in neuroanesthetic practice are unclear. In an effort to determine whether important clinical differences are present, the authors compared three anesthetic techniques in 121 adults undergoing elective surgical removal of a supratentorial, intracranial mass lesion. ⋯ Although there are modest differences among the three tested anesthetics, short-term outcome was not affected. These results indicate that, despite their respective cerebrovascular effects, all of the anesthetic regimens used were acceptable in these patients undergoing elective surgery.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Isoflurane minimum alveolar concentration reduction by fentanyl.
Isoflurane is commonly combined with fentanyl during anesthesia. Because of hysteresis between plasma and effect site, bolus administration of fentanyl does not accurately describe the interaction between these drugs. The purpose of this study was to determine the MAC reduction of isoflurane by fentanyl when both drugs had reached steady biophase concentrations. ⋯ Defining the MAC reduction of isoflurane by all the opioids allows their more rational administration with inhalational anesthetics and provides a comparison of their relative anesthetic potencies.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effectiveness of pressure support ventilation for mechanical ventilatory support in children.
The rapid respiratory frequency of children may lead to patient-ventilator asynchrony and increase the work of breathing during mechanical ventilation, and the use of a small endotracheal tube and a demand valve can further increase this work of breathing. Although pressure support ventilation (PSV) is well known to reduce the work of breathing in adults, there are no reports regarding clinical studies of PSV in children. Therefore, the effect of PSV on breathing patterns and the work of breathing in children was studied. ⋯ It was concluded that PSV can effectively augment spontaneous breathing and reduce the work of breathing in children.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Intrathecal sufentanil for labor analgesia. Effects of added epinephrine.
Intrathecal sufentanil has been found to provide profound analgesia during labor. Epinephrine, when added to various local anesthetic agents or opioids, may modify the analgesic profile and incidence of side effects. The authors sought to determine the effect of adding 0.2 mg epinephrine to 10 micrograms sufentanil when administered for analgesia during labor. ⋯ Intrathecal sufentanil 10 micrograms, both with and without epinephrine, provided rapid-onset, albeit short-duration, analgesia during labor. Epinephrine did not prolong the duration of intrathecal sufentanil analgesia. The addition of epinephrine increased the incidence of nausea and decreased the incidence and severity of pruritus.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Continuous intravenous infusion of rocuronium (ORG 9426) in patients receiving balanced, enflurane, or isoflurane anesthesia.
Rocuronium (ORG 9426) is a new nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agent with a rapid onset and an intermediate duration of action. This study obtains the infusion requirements of rocuronium in 30 patients in whom anesthesia was maintained with barbiturate-nitrous oxide-opioid, nitrous oxide and enflurane, or nitrous oxide and isoflurane. ⋯ The infusion requirements to maintain 95% twitch depression approximated 10 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 during barbiturate-nitrous oxide-opioid anesthesia. These requirements were reduced by 40% during anesthesia involving enflurane or isoflurane.