Anaesthesia
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Anaesthetic techniques and monitoring equipment may interfere with the technical demands of magnetic resonance imaging. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the safety and efficacy of a light anaesthetic technique with intravenous propofol in nonintubated children. In 20 neuropaediatric patients sedation was induced with propofol 1 mg.kg-1, followed by a continuous infusion titrated to produce adequate immobilisation. ⋯ Within 20 min after the end of the procedure all patients were fit for dismissal to the ward. One imaging sequence out of 49 was repeated because of movement artefacts. In conclusion, intravenous propofol sedation appears to be a safe and reliable technique for paediatric sedation during magnetic resonance imaging.
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Case Reports
Failed extradural anaesthesia for caesarean section. Complication of subsequent spinal block.
Two cases of unexpected high spinal anaesthesia following failed extradural anaesthesia for Caesarean section are described. In both cases rapid and unexpected advance of blockade, after the subarachnoid injection of moderate doses of local anaesthetic, required tracheal intubation. In one of the cases 15 ml of 0.9% saline, but no local anaesthetic, had been injected into the extradural space, suggesting that the mechanism involved is the cephalad displacement of the cerebrospinal fluid by extradural fluid, and not leakage of extradural anaesthetic solution into the subarachnoid space.