Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Speed of onset of regional analgesia in labour: a comparison of the epidural and spinal routes.
This study compares the speed of onset of effective analgesia in two randomly assigned groups of patients requesting analgesia in labour. Patients in the combined spinal-epidural group (n = 69) were given a subarachnoid injection of 1.5 ml containing bupivacaine 2.5 mg and fentanyl 25 microg for initiation of analgesia. Patients in the epidural group (n = 73) were given an epidural injection of 10 ml containing bupivacaine 12.5 mg and fentanyl 50 microg. ⋯ Patients in the combined spinal-epidural group suffered a higher incidence of motor weakness and proprioceptive deficit than those in the epidural group (p = 0.01). The incidence of technique failure and side-effects was similar in the two groups. It is our contention that the statistically nonsignificant difference in onset times does not justify the additional potential for side-effects and the extra cost of the equipment involved in the combined spinal-epidural technique.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Ease of tracheal intubation through the intubating laryngeal mask during manual in-line head and neck stabilisation.
We studied 40 anaesthetised and paralysed patients, in a randomised manner, to compare the ease of tracheal intubation either using a Macintosh laryngoscope and gum elastic bougie (group C) with the ease of tracheal intubation through the intubating laryngeal mask using a fibreoptic bronchoscope (group L), during manual in-line stabilisation of the patient's head and neck. In both groups, a maximum of 120 s was allowed for attempts at tracheal intubation. ⋯ The intubating laryngeal mask was placed successfully in 19 of 20 patients, with the median VAS of 18 mm (95% CI: 13-32 mm). The success rate of tracheal intubation in group L (17 patients) was significantly higher than in group C (nine patients) (p < 0.01), tracheal intubation in group L was significantly easier than intubation in group C (p < 0.001; 95% CI for difference in VAS: 18-68 mm) and time taken for tracheal intubation was significantly shorter in group L than in group C (95% CI for difference: 8-50 s).