Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2010
A pilot study of respiratory inductance plethysmography as a safe, noninvasive detector of jet ventilation under general anesthesia.
High-frequency jet ventilation is an optimal mode of ventilation for many surgical procedures of the trachea and larynx but has limited monitoring modalities to assess adequacy of oxygenation and/or ventilation. Respiratory inductance plethysmography is a noninvasive monitor of chest and abdominal wall movement with well-established applications in the sleep laboratory. We performed an observational pilot study of respiratory inductance plethysmography as a detector of jet ventilation. ⋯ Respiratory inductance plethysmography was successfully used to detect high-frequency jet ventilation in patients undergoing laryngotracheal surgery. This pilot study demonstrates the feasibility of respiratory inductance plethysmography as a monitor for use during jet ventilation.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2010
Comparative StudyOral contrast for abdominal computed tomography in children: the effects on gastric fluid volume.
Oral enteric contrast medium (ECM) is frequently administered to achieve visualization of the gastrointestinal tract during abdominal evaluation with computed tomography (CT). Administering oral ECM less than 2 hours before sedation/anesthesia violates the nothing-by-mouth guidelines and in theory may increase the risk of aspiration pneumonia. In this study we measured the residual gastric fluid when using a protocol in which ECM is administered up to 1 hour before anesthesia/sedation. We hypothesized that patients receiving ECM 1 hour before anesthesia/sedation would have residual gastric fluid volume (GFV) >0.4 mL/kg. ⋯ For children receiving an abdominal CT, the residual GFV exceeded 0.4 mL/kg in 49% (178/365) of those who received oral ECM up to 1 hour before anesthesia/sedation in comparison with 23% (11/47) of those who received IV-only contrast.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2010
Feedback mechanisms including real-time electronic alerts to achieve near 100% timely prophylactic antibiotic administration in surgical cases.
Administration of prophylactic antibiotics during surgery is generally performed by the anesthesia providers. Timely antibiotic administration within the optimal time window before incision is critical for prevention of surgical site infections. However, this often becomes a difficult task for the anesthesia team during the busy part of a case when the patient is being anesthetized. ⋯ Installation of AIMS itself did not improve antibiotic compliance over that achieved with paper anesthesia records. However, real-time guidance and reminders through electronic messages generated by a computerized decision support system (Smart Anesthesia Messenger, or SAM) significantly improved compliance. With such a system a consistent compliance of >99% was achieved.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2010
A decision-tree model for predicting extubation outcome in elderly patients after a successful spontaneous breathing trial.
The commonly used single tests, based on a 1-time measurement of a physiologic variable, are often poorly predictive of tracheal extubation outcome because they examine only a single aspect of physiological function that affects the extubation outcome. We hypothesized that the construction of a decision-tree model, which includes multiple variables and considers the changes of these variables, may more accurately predict successful extubation. ⋯ If the current tree model is confirmed by a prospective study with a larger sample size, it would be useful in guiding physicians making extubation decisions in elderly medical intensive care unit patients.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2010
Case ReportsAutonomic dysreflexia-like syndrome in a T12 paraplegic during thoracic spine surgery.
A 19-year-old African American man with a T12 spinal cord lesion underwent a T4-L5 thoracolumbar spinal fusion. Intraoperatively, his arterial blood pressure acutely increased from 110/60 to 260/130 mm Hg without a change in heart rate. ⋯ This presentation differs from autonomic dysreflexia because the spinal cord lesion was well below T6, hypertension was elicited with somatic stimulation above the lesion, and the response required aggressive pharmacologic management. This presentation is consistent with similar cases that support a central autonomic process.