European journal of anaesthesiology
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A 21-year-old female weighing 55 kg was anaesthetized for facial reconstruction. After an initial bolus of pancuronium 5 mg and top-up doses of 2 mg at 135 min and 1 mg at 290 min and 335 min, no further relaxant was given for 130 min at which time neuromuscular transmission appeared fully recovered with a full train-of-four twitches and a sustained response to 50 Hz stimulation of the posterior tibial nerve. ⋯ The serum cholinesterase activity 12 h after surgery was 0.38 units mL-1 (normal range 0.65-1.0 units mL-1). There was no evidence of atypical cholinesterase.
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Case Reports
Hyperacute pneumonitis in a patient with overwhelming Strongyloides stercoralis infection.
The case of a 64-year-old man who was admitted to hospital with fever, general deterioration and anorexia is reported. For the past 4 years, the patient had been receiving corticosteroid therapy for a chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy. Soon after admission the patient developed respiratory insufficiency as a result of a massive pneumonitis, with severe hypoxia, acute anaemia, acute renal failure and a systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) requiring admission to the Intensive Care Unit (ICU). ⋯ This nematode can produce an overwhelming hyperinfection syndrome, especially in patients showing deficient cell-mediated immunity. Strongyloides hyperinfection syndrome is frequently fatal but is potentially a treatable clinical condition. Patients undergoing immunosuppressive therapy or with suspected immunity deficiency (HIV infection, malnutrition, lymphomas, leukaemias or other neoplasia treated with systemic radiotherapy or chemotherapy) must be also monitored for opportunistic Strongyloides stercoralis infection, because clinical manifestation of the systemic hyperinfection syndrome can be rather non-specific.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Duration of stabilization of control responses affects the onset and duration of action of rocuronium but not suxamethonium.
The effect of the duration of stabilization of control responses on the onset and duration of clinical relaxation of suxamethonium 1 mg kg-1 and rocuronium 0.6 mg kg-1 were investigated in 90 patients. The control responses were allowed to stabilize for 1, 5, 10, 15 or 20 min prior to administration of rocuronium and for 1, 5, 10 or 15 min prior to suxamethonium. ⋯ The average duration of clinical relaxation also increased from 25 to 40 min (P < 0.001). No effect was observed for either variable in the case of suxamethonium.
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Comment Letter Comparative Study
Comparison of tramadol with morphine for post-operative pain following abdominal surgery.
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Is rocuronium an exception to the relation between onset and offset? A comparison with pipecuronium.
A general relation between the rate of onset and rate of recovery from non-depolarizing blockade has been demonstrated, with recovery consistently about ten times slower than onset. This observation has led to the suggestion that non-depolarizing agents share a common mechanism of action. Rocuronium, a recently introduced steroidal non-depolarizing agent, is claimed to have a very rapid onset but an intermediate duration and appears to test this hypothesis. ⋯ The mean ratio of recovery time/onset time for rocuronium was 31.3, which is significantly greater than that for pipecuronium, 11.6 (P < 0.01). Whilst pipecuronium conforms to the same general relation between onset and offset described previously for other non-depolarizing agents, rocuronium appears to have a disproportionately rapid rate of onset for its rate of recovery. This suggests that onset, recovery, or both onset and recovery, from rocuronium blockade occur in a different manner to that of other non-depolarizing agents.