Journal of clinical anesthesia
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Elderly patients are prone to develop postoperative neurocognitive deficits potentially precipitated by inadequate anesthetic management. To investigate the potential of EEG-guided individualized anesthetic titration we evaluated the effect of the patient's age on the spectral composition of the EEG during slow propofol induction. Twenty-six young (<65 years) and 25 old (≥65 years) patients received propofol until loss of responsiveness (LOR). ⋯ No patient showed a burst suppression pattern. Whereas the absolute power in all frequency bands decreased significantly with the patient's age, the spectral composition did not change throughout the extended induction period. Slow anesthesia induction may be a suitable approach for geriatric patients to preserve spectral composition patterns typically found in younger brains and to individually identify anesthetic requirements reducing the risk of excessive anesthetic effects.
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To simulate bupivacaine pharmacokinetics in scenarios of labor epidural analgesia (LEA) extended for intrapartum cesarean delivery (CD) with epidural or intrathecal boluses, followed by transversus abdominis plane (TAP) block with liposomal bupivacaine (LB) for postcesarean analgesia. ⋯ Across 6 different simulations of TAP blocks for intrapartum CD analgesia, LEA with bupivacaine (with or without boluses for extension and including a conservative modeling of lidocaine without epinephrine), followed by TAP block with LB and/or bupivacaine hydrochloride 0, 1, or 2 h after CD, is unlikely to result in bupivacaine plasma concentrations reaching local anesthetic systemic toxicity thresholds in healthy patients.
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To decrease the occurrence of remifentanil waste of 1 mg or more (1 full vial) by 25 % in our surgical division while maintaining satisfaction of 60 % of providers by using a remifentanil mixing workflow. ⋯ The implementation of an ADC alert reduced preventable remifentanil waste among anesthesia providers.
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Newer regional anesthesia techniques and minimally invasive surgeries have yielded decreased postoperative pain scores, potentially leading to decreased need for perioperative epidural analgesia. Limited literature is available on trends in usage rates of epidurals. The objective of this study was to identify trends in perioperative epidural analgesia rates among multiple fields of surgery. ⋯ Rates of perioperative epidural analgesia use has decreased in recent years overall, however, among surgeries within the general surgery and vascular surgery specialty, utilization has increased for procedures that have the highest rates of usage.