Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Sep 1988
The pharmacokinetics of bupivacaine when injected intra-articularly after knee arthroscopy.
Bupivacaine pharmacokinetics were determined in 11 patients receiving the drug intra-articularly after knee arthroscopy performed under general anesthesia. Forty ml 0.25% bupivacaine was given at the end of surgery and the thigh tourniquet was released 2 to 3 minutes after injection. ⋯ Results indicate that injections of 100 mg bupivacaine intra-articularly after knee arthroscopy produce peak blood concentrations within the first hour after surgery, and that these will be well below concentrations associated with toxic reactions. Peak concentrations can be minimized with shorter tourniquet inflation times and with longer intervals between injection and tourniquet release.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Sep 1988
Pain scores and ventilatory and circulatory sequelae of epidural morphine in cancer patients with and without prior narcotic therapy.
Pain scores and respiratory and circulatory sequelae of epidural morphine were studied in 25 patients with cancer, classified into two groups: 15 with and 10 without a history of previous narcotic analgesic therapy. Morphine, 2.5 mg initially and 5.0 mg 12 hours later, was given through an indwelling lumbar epidural catheter. ⋯ Statistically significant dose-dependent hypoventilation and concomitant respiratory acidosis were seen in both groups, the changes being significantly greater in opiate-naive patients. These results demonstrate that the ventilatory depressant actions of opioids are attenuated but not eliminated in narcotic-familiar cancer patients and that epidural narcotics are as effective in relieving pain in narcotic-naive patients as in patients previously exposed to narcotics for relief of cancer pain.