Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · May 1992
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEfficacy of lignocaine in alleviating potassium chloride infusion pain.
A double-blind study was set up to investigate the effect of pretreatment with lignocaine on the incidence of potassium chloride infusion pain. Twenty-eight patients were randomly allocated into two equal groups. Patients in both groups were hypokalaemic and were scheduled for replacement consisting of potassium chloride 20 mmol diluted to 100 ml in dextrose 5% solution administered over two hours. ⋯ The incidence of potassium chloride infusion pain was significantly reduced in Group A. There was no adverse effect reported. This study demonstrates the efficacy of bolus dose of lignocaine in alleviating injection pain for the duration of a two-hour continuous infusion.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · May 1992
A survey of Fellows of the Faculty of Anaesthetists of the Royal Australasian College of Surgeons endorsed in intensive care by examination in the first 10 years of final examinations in intensive care.
Fifty-nine of the 70 Fellows of the Faculty of Anaesthetists who had passed the Final Examination in Intensive Care including that of October 1989, responded to a questionnaire on the pattern of their intensive care and anaesthetic practice and their perception of the training and examination. Responses came predominantly from Fellows who had passed the examination more than two years previously. Forty-eight (81%) were practising intensive care at least 50% of the time and 51% had become Director or Deputy Director of an Intensive Care Unit. ⋯ Only eight had sought intensive care as their first vocational qualification. Training and examination were generally regarded favourably except for training in research methods and experience in internal medicine. The results suggest that the intensive care specialist is not likely to leave such practice in the long term, but there has been a reluctance to abandon altogether training and some subsequent practice in anaesthetics.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · May 1992
Alveolar oxygenation and mouth-to-mask ventilation: effects of oxygen insufflation.
The effect on alveolar oxygen fraction (FAO2) of insufflating oxygen under a mask (or through an inflow nipple provided in the mask) during simulated mouth-to-mask ventilation was investigated using a lung model. A variety of commercially produced masks were evaluated. Two patterns of artificial ventilation were applied: 1. 500 ml tidal volume at 20 breaths per minute, and 2. 900 ml tidal volume at 12 breaths per minute. ⋯ The relationship between oxygen flow and FAO2 was not linear however, and an oxygen flow rate of 10 l/min was adequate to generate FAO2's around 50% with either ventilatory pattern. The equilibrium FAO2 achieved was greater with smaller tidal volumes and with larger mask deadspace. We also found that several breaths were required for equilibration of FAO2 during each trial, supporting recommendations that several breaths should be given on commencement of artificial ventilation during cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · May 1992
Prediction of difficult laryngoscopy: an assessment of the thyromental distance and Mallampati predictive tests.
Two hundred and fifty patients were assessed preoperatively using the Mallampati classification and by measuring their thyromental distances. The ease or difficulty of direct laryngoscopy was assessed at the time of induction of anaesthesia. ⋯ It was found that both assessments predicted less than two in three difficult laryngoscopies and had high false positive rates. It was found that external laryngeal pressure often improved the view of the glottis in difficult laryngoscopies.
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Intradermal testing and RIA testing for specific IgE antibodies to neuromuscular blocking drugs (NMBDs) were performed in patients referred to an Anaesthetic Allergy Clinic. Six patients were initially investigated four to 29 years after clinical anaphylaxis during anaesthesia and two of these patients and sixteen others were investigated by intradermal testing on two occasions at least four years apart. Seven patients had RIA tests for NMBD-specific IgE antibodies on two occasions at the time of skin testing. ⋯ In one patient all tests became negative and in another the skin test became negative but the positive RIA persisted. Evidence of antibodies to NMBDs persisted in 21 of 22 patients who had had anaphylactic reactions to these drugs during anaesthesia. In the absence of evidence of allergy diminishing with time in the majority of patients it would seem wise to avoid drugs responsible for reactions for the rest of the patient's life.