Journal of anesthesia
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Journal of anesthesia · Dec 1995
Liver and renal functions following total intravenous anesthesia using midazolam and fentanyl-comparison with enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia.
Thirty patients undergoing lower abdominal surgery were studied to compare liver and renal functions in total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) using midazolam and fentanyl with those in enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia (GOE). Patients were randomly divided into two groups of 15. In the TIVA group, anesthesia was induced with 0.3 mg·kg(-1) midazolam and maintained with 0.68 mg·kg(-1)·h(-1) midazolam for 15 min followed by 0.125 mg·kg(-1)·h(-1) midazolam and fentanyl. ⋯ BUN and Cr were within the normal range. There were no differences between the two groups regarding these parameters and the numbers with abnormally high levels of each parameter. In conclusion, liver and renal functions following TIVA using midazolam and fentanyl were the same as those following enflurane-nitrous oxide anesthesia.
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Journal of anesthesia · Dec 1995
RETRACTED ARTICLE: The dose-response relationship of amrinone in increasing the contractility of fatigued diaphragm in dogs.
We studied the dose-related effects of amrinone on the contractility of a fatigued diaphragm in 16 anesthetized, mechanically ventilated dogs. The animals were divided into two groups: the control group (Group C,n=8) and the amrinone group (Group A,n=8). Diaphragmatic fatigue was induced by intermittent supramaximal bilateral electrophrenic stimulation at a frequency of 20 Hz applied for 30 min. ⋯ In Group, C, the speed of recovery ofP di at 20 Hz stimulation was relatively slower. The integrated electric activity of the diaphragam (E di) in each group did not change at any frequency of stimulation throughout the experiment. We conclude that amrinone exerts a dose-dependent enhancement of the contractility of a fatigued diaphragm in dogs.
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To reduce the doses of intravenous anesthetics (ketamine, diazepam, droperidol, and vecuronium) used in total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), epidural administration of a ϰ-stimulating opioid, eptazocine, was combined with TIVA in 115 patients. Surgical procedures were uneventful under TIVA plus epidural eptazocine; significant depression of EEG and somatosensory-evoked potentials during anesthesia were observed without delay in recovery. ⋯ Therefore, epidural eptazocine may make it possible to use lower doses of anesthesia in TIVA, thus reducing the adverse effects associated with TIVA such as hypertension during surgery, intraoperative awareness, postanesthetic respiratory depression, delayed recovery from anesthesia, and neurological signs after anesthesia. This may be due to the ϰ-stimulating action of epidural eptazocine on the spinal cord and its σ-blocking action, as well as its lack of μ-action on the brain.
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Journal of anesthesia · Dec 1995
Evaluation of a delivery system and monitors for ventilator administration of nitric oxide.
The aim of this study was to compare nitric oxide (NO) and nitrogen dioxide (NO2) measurements obtained by chemiluminescence and electrochemical monitors using a delivery system for ventilator administration of NO. The formation of NO2 in this system and the efficacy of a soda-lime absorber to scavenge NO2 from inspiratory gas were also evaluated. Various concentrations of NO without and with soda lime were administered to a model lung via a Servo ventilator 900C with controlled ventilation by setting mass-flow regulators to maintain desired concentrations of NO in 80% O2. ⋯ NO, although a high concentration of NO2 appeared in the breathing circuit without soda lime. Four hundred grams of soda lime continued to absorb NO2 effectively during long-term administration of inhaled NO. These findings suggest that electrochemical monitoring is accurate and clinically useful for measurements of NO and NO2 concentrations, and that low doses of inhaled NO can be administered safely and reliably with the NO delivery system using a soda-lime absorber and mass-flow regulators.