Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1994
Comparative StudyOn the relative potency of amino-amide local anaesthetics in vivo.
With the aim of comparing the analgesic effectiveness of lidocaine, prilocaine, bupivacaine and etidocaine in vivo, a study of the relationships between dose and duration of infraorbital nerve block (IONB) of various intensities (IONB degrees 3-10) was performed in the rat. With increasing doses longer durations of action were obtained. Further analyses were performed using multiple regression analysis. ⋯ The difference between these agents with respect to their duration of action at all dose levels amounted to 11 +/- 3 minutes (M +/- s.e.m.) for etidocaine vs. lidocaine (IONB degree 10), 27 +/- 4 min for prilocaine vs. lidocaine and 54 +/- 5 min for bupivacaine vs. etidocaine (IONB degree 3). For all other comparisons the log (dose)-duration lines deviated from parallelism, i.e. differences between agents with respect to their duration of action were found to be dose-dependent. The slopes of the log (dose)-duration lines were found to correlate closely to the log (partition coefficient) and log (protein binding) of the investigated agents.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1994
Central-to-peripheral arterial pressure gradient during cardiopulmonary bypass: relation to pre- and intra-operative data and effects of vasoactive agents.
A significant central-to-peripheral arterial pressure gradient may exist during and after cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB). The etiology and mechanisms of this phenomenon remain controversial. We studied the pressure gradient between aorta, brachial artery and radial artery in 68 patients, scheduled for elective coronary artery bypass surgery. ⋯ There was also no relation between magnitude of the pressure gradient and type of cardioprotection, choice of pulsatile vs nonpulsatile flow on CPB and duration of CPB. We also found no relation between pressure gradients and changes in temperature, haematocrit and systemic vascular resistance. The pressure gradient was not affected by any of the vasoactive drugs.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1994
Editorial Comment Historical ArticleThe polio epidemic in Copenhagen in 1952--and how the anaesthetist came out of the operating room.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1994
Use of 29-gauge spinal needles and a fixation device with combined spinal epidural technique.
One hundred patients between 15-46 years, undergoing elective surgery, were given spinal anaesthesia using 29-gauge spinal needles introduced through a Tuohy needle with a fixation device. Successful spinal anaesthesia was achieved in 98%. A success rate of 100% was achieved when a combined spinal epidural technique was used. Ninety-eight percent of the patients would prefer the same anaesthesia procedure for similar kind of surgery in the future.