Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1984
High-dose hydromorphone (Dilaudid) for coronary artery bypass surgery.
The hemodynamic effects of high-dose hydromorphone hydrochloride (H), 1.25 mg/kg, were investigated in 10 patients with normal ventricular function undergoing coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery. One patient with unstable angina was excluded from the study because of hypotension and facial flushing after a 6-mg test dose of H. Nine patients showed no significant change in heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac index (CI), left ventricular stroke work index (LVSWI), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), or coronary perfusion pressure (CPP) after H; central venous pressure (CVP) increased significantly (P less than 0.05). ⋯ Vasodilators were required in eight patients before aortic cannulation and after extracorporeal circulation. Mean time to awakening was 7.6 hr after the full dose of H, and extubation was performed the morning after surgery (21 hr after H) according to our usual practice. We conclude that very large doses of H (equivalent in analgesic terms to 10 mg/kg of morphine sulfate) are well tolerated by most patients undergoing CABG surgery, but unconsciousness and complete suppression of sympathetic responses require supplementation of H with additional anesthetic agents or vasodilators.
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Vecuronium bromide, 0.045 mg X kg-1, was compared with pancuronium, 0.07 mg X kg-1, when used to provide muscle relaxation for tracheal intubation and abdominal relaxation for outpatient gynecologic laparoscopy. Both drugs provided adequate intubating conditions within 5 min and satisfactory abdominal relaxation. Because spontaneous recovery from vecuronium was more rapid, either with inhalational or nitrous oxide-narcotic techniques, pharmacological reversal with edrophonium and atropine was either not necessary or more easily accomplished after vecuronium, as shown by the train-of-four. ⋯ Tests of muscle power and coordination performed 30 and 60 min postoperatively showed no difference between the drugs. There were no postoperative complications related to muscle relaxants and all patients met our discharge criteria the day of surgery. Given the conditions observed at the end of the procedure, we would choose vecuronium for muscular relaxation in laparoscopic surgery.