Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 1990
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialSubjective responses to train-of-four and double burst stimulation in awake patients.
The present study was undertaken to determine whether the discomfort associated with the sequential bursts of stimuli comprising the two recommended forms of double burst stimulation (DBS) is comparable to that associated with the repetitive stimuli of train-of-four (TOF). Twenty-one unmedicated volunteers rated on a visual analog scale the discomfort associated with randomly applied DBS and TOF stimulations at 20, 30 and 50 mA. All participants were blinded to the mode of stimulation, as well as to the current intensity. ⋯ Stimulation at 50 mA produced median visual analog scale scores of 7.5, 7.0, and 5.0 for DBS3,2, DBS3,3, and TOF, respectively. At 30 mA the corresponding median visual analog scale scores were 4.5, 5.5, and 3.0, whereas at 20 mA the scores were 4.0, 4.5, and 2.0, respectively. Thus, DBS is more uncomfortable than TOF at each current tested; however, in light of reports of its higher sensitivity, DBS may be the preferred means of assessing neuromuscular function in the awake as well as the anesthetized patient when a force transducer and recorder are not readily available.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 1990
Mass spectrometric measurements of oxygen uptake during epidural analgesia combined with general anesthesia.
Oxygen uptake was measured using a mass spectrometer system in 12 patients scheduled for abdominal surgery who intraoperatively were mechanically ventilated with 50% nitrous oxide and given continuous intravenous infusions of methohexital (3.5 mg.kg-1.h-1) plus repeated epidural injections of lidocaine. At the end of the surgical procedure, meperidine (0.7 mg/kg) was epidurally injected in six patients (group A). The other six patients (group B) received no epidural injections during the first 2 h after surgery. ⋯ Within the first two postoperative hours, clear-cut differences among the two groups arose. Patients in group A had smoother increases in oxygen uptake and core temperatures, greater cardiovascular stability as reflected by the rate-pressure product, and no visible shivering. We suggest that epidural meperidine given immediately at the end of a surgical procedure might be beneficial, especially, perhaps, in patients with impaired cardiac function.