Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2006
Comparative StudyIncorporating simulation-based objective structured clinical examination into the Israeli National Board Examination in Anesthesiology.
We describe the unique process whereby simulation-based, objective structured clinical evaluation (OSCE) has been incorporated into the Israeli board examination in anesthesiology. Development of the examination included three steps: a) definition of clinical conditions that residents are required to handle competently, b) definition of tasks pertaining to each of the conditions, and c) incorporation of the tasks into hands-on simulation-based examination stations in the OSCE format, including 1) trauma management, 2) resuscitation, 3) crisis management in the operating room, 4) regional anesthesia, and 5) mechanical ventilation. Members of the Israeli Board of Anesthesiology Examination Committee assisted by experts from the Israel Center for Medical Simulation and from Israel's National Institute for Testing and Evaluation were involved in this process and in the development of the assessment tools, orientation of examinees, and preparation of examiners. ⋯ The correlation between the total score and the general score was 0.76. According to a subjective feedback questionnaire, most (70%-90%) participants found the difficulty level of the examination stations reasonable to very easy and prefer this method of examination to a conventional oral examination. The incorporation of OSCE-driven modalities in the certification of anesthesiologists in Israel is a continuing process of evaluation and assessment.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 2006
Meta AnalysisA systematic review (meta-analysis) of the accuracy of the Mallampati tests to predict the difficult airway.
The original and modified Mallampati tests are commonly used to predict the difficult airway, but there is controversy regarding their accuracy. We searched MEDLINE and other databases for prospective studies of patients undergoing general anesthesia in which the results of a preoperative Mallampati test were compared with the subsequent rate of difficult airway (difficult laryngoscopy, difficult intubation, or difficult ventilation as reference tests). Forty-two studies enrolling 34,513 patients were included. ⋯ The Mallampati tests were poor at identifying difficult mask ventilation. Publication bias was not detected. Used alone, the Mallampati tests have limited accuracy for predicting the difficult airway and thus are not useful screening tests.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 2006
Comparative StudyPharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic modeling the hypnotic effect of sevoflurane using the spectral entropy of the electroencephalogram.
Spectral entropy is a new electroencephalogram (EEG)-derived parameter that may be used to model the pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic (PKPD) effects of general anesthetics. In the present study we sought to derive a PKPD model of the relationship between sevoflurane concentration and spectral entropy of the EEG. We collected spectral entropy data during increasing and decreasing sevoflurane anesthesia from 20 patients. ⋯ The effect-compartment inhibitory E(max) model accurately describes the relation between sevoflurane concentration and spectral entropy of the EEG. Spectral entropy decreases with increasing sevoflurane concentrations up to 3%. The steepness of the dose-response curve varies between phases of increasing and decreasing anesthetic concentrations.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Mar 2006
Comparative StudyKetamine attenuates sympathetic activity through mechanisms not mediated by N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors in the isolated spinal cord of neonatal rats.
Ketamine is believed to have sympathomimetic effects, although the central mechanism remains unclear. Using an in vitro splanchnic nerve-spinal cord preparation from neonatal rats, our previous investigations have demonstrated that tonic sympathetic activity is spontaneously generated from the thoracic spinal cord. We designed this study to investigate whether applications of ketamine to the cord would augment sympathetic activity and whether this action was dependent on N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors. ⋯ The 50% inhibitory concentration of ketamine on sympathetic activity was 32 muM. Pretreatment with DL-2-amino-5-phosphonovaleric acid, a selective competitive N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor antagonist, did not alter ketamine-induced depression of sympathetic activity. These results suggest that ketamine reduces sympathetic activity by mechanisms that are independent of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor activity.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jul 2006
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyA prospective, randomized comparison between the popliteal and subgluteal approaches for continuous sciatic nerve block with stimulating catheters.
In this prospective, blinded study, we randomized 56 patients undergoing hallux valgus repair to receive continuous sciatic nerve block using a subgluteal (n = 28) or a posterior popliteal approach (n = 28) with a perineural stimulating catheter. Postoperatively, the stimulating catheter was connected to a patient-controlled analgesia pump with 0.0625% levobupivacaine (basal infusion rate of 3 mL/h, patient-controlled bolus dose of 3 mL, and lockout time of 20 min). Both approaches provided similar postoperative analgesia; however, local anesthetic consumption was larger in the popliteal group (4.9 +/- 1.4 mL/h) compared with the subgluteal group (3.8 +/- 1.1 mL/h; P < 0.05). We conclude continuous postoperative analgesia using stimulating catheters was effective at both injection sites; however, a subgluteal approach reduced the overall amount of local anesthetic.