Anaesthesia
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Anatomy textbooks state that the conus medullaris moves cephalad when the vertebral column is flexed. This could confer protection against spinal cord damage during dural puncture, but has not been demonstrated in vivo. We therefore imaged the spine of 10 volunteers using magnetic resonance imaging to determine if such movement occurs with the spine in the neutral and flexed positions. ⋯ On spinal flexion, the conus medullaris moved cephalad in three subjects and caudad in three subjects, with no change in the remaining four. The median overall movement (95% CI [range]) was 0 mm (4 mm caudad to 1 mm cephalad [3 mm caudad to 1 mm cephalad]; p = 1.0). Whilst spinal flexion may facilitate needle insertion during dural puncture, it is unlikely to confer extra protection against spinal cord damage.
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An endobronchial tube (Macintosh-Leatherdale) was used to secure the airway for a tracheal resection and end-to-end anastomosis. This lung separation device enabled insertion of both a fibreoptic bronchoscope and a tube exchange catheter. ⋯ Options and management issues for tracheal surgery and lung separators are discussed. A case is made for a re-evaluation of endobronchial tubes both as a useful conduit for modern airway instruments and as an alternative to small double-lumen tubes for the increasing population of obese patients weighing > 100 kg, requiring thoracic surgery.
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The search for a connection between James Robinson, the dental surgeon who on 19 December 1846 administered the first general anaesthetic in England by the inhalation of the vapour of ether, and William Hooper, the pharmaceutical chemist who produced the best publicised and most widely used of the early commercial ether vaporisers, has revealed hitherto unrecognised aspects of the early history of general anaesthesia.
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We present the case of a 62-year-old man with severe cold agglutinin disease who underwent major colorectal surgery. Cold agglutinin disease is a condition in which auto-antibodies, usually immunoglobulin M, cause red blood cell agglutination at decreased body temperature. ⋯ Haemolysis can result in anaemia and thrombotic events caused by microvascular occlusion, in addition to haemoglobinuria and renal failure. Peri-operative hypothermia is common in all patients and may be associated with significant morbidity, but is potentially catastrophic in a patient suffering from cold agglutinin disease.
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We report two patients with difficult airways who underwent tracheal intubation using the new fibreoptic intubating Laryngeal Mask Airway CTrach. The imaging technology of the LMA-CTrach was decisive in the management of these two patients. ⋯ Given the anatomical difficulties encountered, it was likely that intubation would have been difficult or impossible through the LMA-Fastrach. The aim of this report is to describe the successful use of this new intubating laryngeal mask airway in these two challenging patients.