Anaesthesia and intensive care
-
Anaesth Intensive Care · Sep 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialEffect of preoperative education on behaviour of children during induction of anaesthesia: a randomised clinical trial of efficacy.
In this randomised prospective study we aimed to evaluate whether preoperative anaesthetic education delivered to children on the day of surgery reduces anxiety behaviour during induction of anaesthesia. One hundred children, six to 15 years of age, undergoing general anaesthesia for ambulatory surgery were allocated at random to a preoperative education group (n=50) or a control group (n=50). The main outcomes were behaviour score, self-reporting of satisfaction score and identification of the stage when children felt most fearful. ⋯ Intravenous induction failed in nine out of 38 children in the intervention group (23.7%) compared to five out of 40 in the control group (12.5%). When intravenous induction failed, eight out of nine (89%) of the intervention group remained co-operative during gas induction compared to two out of five (40%) of the control group. Preoperative education delivered on the day of surgery did not reduce anxiety behaviour in children during intravenous induction of anaesthesia, but did reduce anxiety during subsequent inhalational induction.
-
Anaesth Intensive Care · Sep 2012
Randomized Controlled TrialLong thoracic nerve block in video-assisted thoracoscopic wedge resection for pneumothorax.
We hypothesised that relaxation of the serratus anterior muscle by long thoracic nerve (LTN) block could help pain relief after video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery. Patients undergoing thoracoscopic wedge resection for pneumothorax were randomly assigned to control or LTN block. LTN block was performed before induction of general anaesthesia. ⋯ Total intravenous patient-controlled analgesia bolus dose (alfentanil 75 µg/ml) during PACU stay (1.6±1.2 vs 3.9±2.0 ml, P<0.001) and one hour after discharge from the PACU (0.5±0.8 vs 1.7±1.2 ml, P<0.001) in the LTN group was significantly lower than the control group. Total intravenous patient-controlled analgesia bolus dose from 1-24 hours after discharge from the PACU was similar between groups (P=0197). These findings indicate that LTN block reduced pain after video-assisted thoracoscopic surgery from end-of-surgery to one hour after discharge from the PACU.