Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1981
Comparative StudyCaudal block for post-operative pain relief in children after genital operations. A comparison between bupivacaine and morphine.
Twenty-two children formed the basis for a controlled study of the effect and duration of the postoperatively applied caudal block on postoperative pain after genital operations. The purpose of the study was to compare the effect and duration of bupivacaine and morphine. Ten children (Group I, outpatients) underwent circumcision and 12 children (Group II, inpatients) underwent correction of hypospadias. ⋯ Outpatients were discharged after 4-5 h, and the caudal blocks with both bupivacaine and morphine were then still effective. In inpatients, the duration of pain relief was significantly longer using morphine (range 610-2195 min) than using bupivacaine (range 245-515 min). There were no complications of the caudal blocks.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1981
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEffects of precurarization on the blood pressure and heart rate changes induced by suxamethonium facilitated laryngoscopy and intubation.
The effects of precurarization on blood pressure and heart rate increases during laryngoscopy and intubation were studied in 60 surgical patients, who were randomly allocated to four groups, receiving as a pretreatment d-tubocurarine (0.05 mg/kg), alcuronium (0.03 mk/kg) , pancuronium (0.008 mg/kg) or saline in a double-blind fashion. d-Tubocurarine and alcuronium pretreatments seemed to attenuate the blood pressure increase during laryngoscopy and intubation under suxamethonium. Moreover, d-tubocurarine pretreatment protected effectively against high blood-pressure increases. Heart-rate increases were of the same magnitude in all the pretreated groups. d-Tubocurarine pretreatment abolished suxamethonium-induced fasciculations completely, whereas alcuronium pretreatment gave protection in 93% and pancuronium pretreatment in 43% of patients.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Aug 1981
Cerebral blood flow in the acute phase after head injury. Part 2: Correlation to intraventricular pressure (IVP), cerebral perfusion pressure (CPP), PaCO2, ventricular fluid lactate, lactate/pyruvate ratio and pH.
In 40 comatose patients with severe head injury, cerebral blood flow (CBF) studies were performed with the 133Xenon washout technique over the most severely injured hemisphere. All patients were mildly sedated with diazepam, chlorpromazine and meperidine and subjected to respiratory support. Simultaneously with the CBF study, intraventricular pressure (IVP), systemic arterial pressure (SAP) and ventricular fluid (VF) lactate, pyruvate and pH were measured. ⋯ In patients with mainly supratentorial lesions without signs of brain-stem lesions, CBF and CPP were positively correlated, while CBF and ICP were negatively correlated (lost autoregulation). In contradistinction, CBF was positively correlated to ICP and PaCO2 in patients with diffuse brain injury. In some cases of repeated dynamic studies, the clinical course seemed to be related to changes in the measured parameters.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jun 1981
Central haemodynamics and oxygen transport during CPAP with and without mandatory ventilations.
Ten patients, subjected 16 h earlier to open-heart surgery (aortocoronary bypass and/or aortic valve replacement), were studied during the weaning period after postoperative mechanical ventilation. Central haemodynamics and oxygen transport were assessed along with total oxygen consumption during continuous positive airway pressure with four mandatory ventilations per minute (mode CPAP + IMV) and, subsequently, during CPAP alone. ⋯ All parameters of haemodynamics, oxygenation and oxygen consumption were found to be essentially satisfactory and unchanged during both modes of ventilation. Our observations suggest that, as the parameters studied were unaltered with the change from CPAP + IMV to CPAP, the use of ventilatory support for these patients during the weaning period (in the form of four mandatory ventilations per minute) appears, in terms of central haemodynamics and oxygen transport, to be well tolerated in cases where adequate spontaneous ventilation is in doubt.