Journal of anesthesia
-
Journal of anesthesia · Apr 2023
Effect of remimazolam on intraoperative neurophysiology monitoring of visual-evoked potential: a case series.
There are very few reports on the effects of benzodiazepines such as midazolam and diazepam on intraoperative visual-evoked potential (VEP), and there is no report on the effect of remimazolam at all. Five patients underwent neurosurgery using VEP monitoring for avoiding surgical injury to the optic nerve. In all cases, drug administration was based on actual body weight. ⋯ After a time, when blood levels of remimazolam appeared to be stable, VEP was monitored again and compared to controls. In all cases, we were able to confirm that there was reproducibility. Remimazolam may provide a comparable quality of anesthesia to that of existing drugs for VEP in neurosurgery.
-
Journal of anesthesia · Apr 2023
Reviewing COVID-19 from an anesthesiologist's perspective in 2022: JA symposium.
The COVID-19 pandemic is ongoing as of September 2022. Since January 2020 when the first case was reported in Japan, the medical community faced a variety of problems both domestically and internationally. It is meaningful to review the impact of COVID-19 from an anesthesiologist's perspective to clarify our policy for future infectious disease outbreaks. ⋯ However, they have also played an important backup role in intensive care as critical care physicians and must be more involved in critical care in regular (non-pandemic) times to properly fulfill this role. It is especially important for the Japan Society of Anesthesiologists and JA to quickly disseminate accurate information on unknown infectious diseases to the medical community and wider society. Therefore, it is important to promptly publish papers that are quality-assured through peer review.
-
Journal of anesthesia · Apr 2023
Case ReportsMotor-evoked potentials monitoring with remimazolam during thoracic descending aortic aneurysm surgery: a case report.
Paraplegia remains the most devastating complication following thoracoabdominal aortic surgery. Motor-evoked potential (MEP) monitoring has been widely used to assess intraoperative motor function. MEP amplitude is affected by various factors, including anesthetic agents and measurement time; however, there are no reports regarding MEP monitoring using remimazolam in thoracoabdominal aortic surgery. ⋯ There were no significant changes, which were defined as a 50% reduction of MEP amplitude from each baseline value, including during split circulation. On postoperative day one, she had no motor deficits nor signs of intraoperative awareness. Remimazolam might be well tolerated for MEP monitoring in patients undergoing thoracic descending aortic aneurysm surgery.
-
Journal of anesthesia · Apr 2023
Observational StudyTracheal tube cuff pressure during anesthesia for robotic-assisted laparoscopic prostatectomy and the efficacy of an automatic cuff pressure controller (SmartCuff): observational studies of 1-sample paired data.
The cuff pressure of a tracheal tube may increase during robot-assisted laparoscopic surgery for prostatectomy (RALP), which requires pneumoperitoneum in a steep head-down position, but there have been no studies which confirmed this. ⋯ The cuff pressure of a tracheal tube would frequently increase markedly in patients undergoing RALP, whereas it would frequently decrease markedly in patients undergoing gynecological laparotomy. The SmartCuff may inhibit the changes in the cuff pressure during anesthesia.