Anästhesiologie, Intensivmedizin, Notfallmedizin, Schmerztherapie : AINS
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Aug 1992
Biography Historical Article[Curare and its successors. A 50-year's evolution].
The introduction of curare into clinical anaesthesia by Griffith and Johnson in 1942 contributed to the termination of the era where anaesthesia was a reversible intoxication rather than the result of controlled drug action. Curare allowed general anaesthesia to be reduced to a lighter level, thereby conferring a significant safety factor to the patient. Both the shortage in supply of crude curare and its variable composition led the search for synthetic curare analogues conferring well defined pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties. ⋯ Researchers became aware that new muscle relaxants should be designed for larger volumes of distribution and more rapid biodegradation than those currently available. Concurrently, anaesthesia techniques had changed in a way to use intubation and mechanical ventilation as a routine procedure. The risk of intraoperative hypoventilation and hypoxemia was eliminated, yet, due to the lack of adequate monitoring techniques the slow recovery from curare, alcuronium or pancuronium neuromuscular blockade was hardly appreciated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Aug 1992
[Initial experiences with rigid angled optical systems as intubation aids in difficult intubation].
Referring to a classification by Cormack, difficult laryngoscopy of Grade 3 (only the epiglottis or a part of it can be seen) was simulated in 16 patients by lowering the blade of the laryngoscope, so that the epiglottis was pushed down and thus covered up the vocal cords. The object of the study was to test whether a newly developed rigid endoscope is a useful tool during intubation in cases of laryngoscopical view Grade 3. ⋯ The tracheal tube was inserted into the trachea, under endoscopic control. With this new method, naso-tracheal intubation under endoscopic control in all 16 patients was successful, without affecting the pharynx and the vocal cords.
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Jun 1992
Review[The scientific basis of cardiopulmonary and cerebral resuscitation].
A survey is given on the scientific background of cardiopulmonary-cerebral resuscitation, which supposedly will be the basis of all clinical practice in this field. Haemodynamic, respiratory, acid-base, and cerebral problems are discussed in detail. As for haemodynamics, the pathomechanisms of the conventional "heart pump" and the "thoracic pump" as background of the "New CPR" are compared, the flow being generated by a direct compression of the heart in the former and by a phasic increase of the intrathoracic pressure in the latter case. ⋯ Finally, open cardiac massage is no doubt superior to all the other indirect and closed methods of cardiac resuscitation. Defibrillators and heart-lung "thumpers" are then described, mentioning the improvements in respect of automatic and semi-automatic defibrillation and the progress made by developing flexible and individually adaptable types of "thumpers". On assessing the sympathicomimetic drugs, it is evident that epinephrine is the method of choice in the acute phase of resuscitation; the pure beta-adrenergics isoprenaline and orciprenaline are not used any more, whereas the alpha-mimetics, although acutely effective similar to epinephrine, cannot produce positive long-term effects; the combination of dobutamine and dopamine seems to be ideal for establishing stable haemodynamic situations following a successful acute reanimation procedure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Anasthesiol Intensivmed Notfallmed Schmerzther · Jun 1992
[Therapy of hemorrhagic shock using small volumes of hypertonic-hyperoncotic NaCl-dextran solution--effects on the brain].
Infusion of small volumes of hypertonic/hyperoncotic solution (HHL: 7.2% NaCl/10% dextran 60) is highly effective in haemorrhagic shock. Cardiovascular function is restored in a matter of minutes by rapid mobilisation of extravasal fluid. However, little experience has been collected to date on the side effects on the brain by this new form of shock therapy. ⋯ The regional cerebral blood flow (H2-clearance) and the cerebral O2 supply were studied by determining the pO2 of the cerebral cortex in experimental animals without haemorrhagic shock but with infusion of HHL. Finally, separate single tests were conducted to analyse the effect of the infusion of HHL on the intracranial pressure after induction of a focal cold lesion of the brain in combination with the implantation of a rubber balloon in the epidural space as an intracranial space-occupying growth. Infusion of HHL during shock produced rapid normalisation of cardiac output, whereas in normovolaemic animals without shock it produced a temporary increase of this parameter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)