Anesthesia and analgesia
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A technique for brachial plexus anesthesia is described consisting of the injection of 20 ml of local anesthetic solution into the lower part of the posterior triangle of the neck at a point 1.5 to 2 cm above the clavicle at the lateral border of the anterior scalene muscle. The technique is simple, safe, and produced satisfactory anesthesia of the entire extremity in 97 of the first 100 cases in which it was used. Side effects and complications were minor and transient.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jul 1979
Comparative StudyPhysiologic effects of deep hypothermia and microwave rewarming: possible application for neonatal cardiac surgery.
Deep hypothermia (20 C) without cardiopulmonary bypass is a valuable technique during cardiac surgery in infants but rewarming of the heart following circulatory arrest and cardiac repair has traditionally been a lengthy and difficult process. In experimental animals rewarming the heart with microwave energy, as reported in this work, warms the heart before warming the periphery. ⋯ Blood pressure and arterial gases remained adequate. Microwave rewarming appears to be a useful method for reestablishment of cardiac function and normothermia following deep hypothermia.
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Under conditions of temperature and pressure commonly found in operating rooms, the anesthetics enflurane, halothane, and isoflurane act as nearly ideal gasses even at concentrations producing a saturated vapor phase. The deviations from ideality are 3.44 +/- 0.44% (SEM) for enflurane, 0.94 +/- 0.30% for halothane, and 2.96 +/- 0.29% for isoflurane. That is, 0.9 to 3.4% more anesthetic is vaporized than would be predicted from the vapor pressure of these agents.