Anaesthesia
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Multicenter Study Clinical Trial
Hypoxia during upper gastrointestinal endoscopy with and without sedation and the effect of pre-oxygenation on oxygen saturation.
In Study A, the incidence of arterial oxygen desaturation was studied using pulse oximetry (SaO2) in 100 sedated and 100 nonsedated patients breathing room air who underwent diagnostic upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Hypoxia (SaO2 92% or less of at least 15 s duration) occurred in 17% and 6% of sedated patients and nonsedated patients, respectively (p < 0.03). Mild desaturation (SaO2 94% or less and less than 15 s duration) occurred in 47% of sedated patients compared with 12% of nonsedated patients (p < 0.001). ⋯ Sedation significantly increases the incidence of desaturation and hypoxia. Supplementary nasal oxygen at 4 1 x min(-1) in sedated patients abolishes desaturation and hypoxia. Pre-oxygenation confers no additional benefit.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Prophylactic amrinone for weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass.
This prospective, randomised, double-blind, controlled clinical study was performed at a single tertiary referral centre to test the hypothesis that the prophylactic administration of amrinone before separation of a patient from cardiopulmonary bypass decreases the incidence of failure to wean, and to identify those patients who could be predicted to benefit from such pre-emptive management. Two hundred and thirty-four patients, scheduled to undergo elective cardiac surgery, were randomly allocated to receive either a bolus dose of 1.5 mg x kg(-1) amrinone over 15 min, followed by an infusion of 10 microg x kg(-1) x min(-1), or a bolus of placebo of equal volume followed by an infusion of placebo. Treatment with amrinone or placebo was initiated upon release of the aortic cross-clamp, before weaning from cardiopulmonary bypass. ⋯ Significantly fewer patients failed to wean in the group that received prophylactic amrinone than in the control group (7 vs. 21%, p = 0.002). Amrinone improved weaning success regardless of left ventricular ejection fraction, although this benefit was statistically significant only in the group with left ventricular ejection fractions > 55%. Of the 32 patients who failed to wean from cardiopulmonary bypass, 14 had normal pre-operative left ventricular ejection fractions.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effect of sevoflurane on implicit memory: a double-blind, randomised study.
Forty-eight gynaecological patients were randomly allocated to three groups (target end-tidal sevoflurane concentration 1.2, 1.5 or 2%), and into subgroups for positive or neutral suggestion. Anaesthesia was induced by inhalation of sevoflurane in oxygen. When the target concentration was achieved, the bispectral index, computed from a bi-frontal electroencephalogram, was noted. ⋯ Priming increased the likelihood of identifying words in the 1.2% group only, i.e. there was evidence of implicit memory in this group. There was no evidence of a therapeutic effect of positive suggestion (p = 0.3), but the power of this part of the study was low. The bispectral index did not achieve statistical significance as an indicator of susceptibility to priming.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The effect of humidification and smoking habit on the incidence of adverse airway events during deepening of anaesthesia with desflurane.
The effect of two levels of humidification on the incidence of adverse airway events was studied in 58 adult female patients during deepening of anaesthesia using up to 12% desflurane. Humidification was provided by a breathing system filter with either low moisture-conserving performance (17.2 mg x l(-1) at 0.5 1 tidal volume, Group L) or high moisture-conserving performance (33.5 mg x l(-1) at 0.5 1 tidal volume, Group H). Forty-eight per cent of patients smoked and there were more smokers in Group L than in Group H. ⋯ When both humidity and age were included in the analysis, there was a significant smoking-humidity interaction (p < 0.05), such that high humidity decreased the incidence of coughing in nonsmokers but not in smokers. The incidence of laryngospasm was significantly lower in Group H than in Group L (p < 0.05). We conclude that when patients inspire high concentrations of desflurane during induction of anaesthesia, increasing humidification to the levels achieved in this study decreases the incidence of coughing among nonsmokers and of laryngospasm in both smokers and nonsmokers.
-
We studied 20 anaesthetic assistants applying simulated cricoid pressure with the left or right hand in random order. Simulated cricoid pressure was continued for up to 5 min with one hand and then, after resting, with the other hand. Applied pressure was measured at intervals and the subjects were blind to the results. ⋯ Cricoid pressure was released before 5 min in three cases, two left-handed and one right-handed. Our results demonstrate that anaesthetic assistants apply a lower force than is classically taught and are able to maintain the force with either hand for a sustained period. Application with the left hand is justified where clinically indicated but may have a lower margin for error than when applied with the right hand.