Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Carbetocin at elective caesarean section: a sequential allocation trial to determine the minimum effective dose in obese women.
Postpartum haemorrhage is a leading cause of maternal death during childbirth. There is an increasing incidence of atonic postpartum haemorrhage in developed countries, and maternal obesity has been proposed as a contributing factor. The dose-response relationship of carbetocin in obese women has not yet been determined. ⋯ The estimated blood loss was 880 (621-1178 [75-2442]) ml. The overall rates of hypotension and hypertension after delivery were 40% and 6.7%, respectively, while nausea occurred in 26.7% of women. The ED90 for carbetocin in obese women at elective caesarean section is lower than the dose of 100 μg currently recommended by the Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada, but is approximately four times higher than the previously demonstrated ED90 of 14.8 μg in women with body mass index < 40 kg.m-2 .
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Multicenter Study Observational Study
Reliability of gastric suctioning compared with ultrasound assessment of residual gastric volume: a prospective multicentre cohort study.
We aimed to compare the reliability of aspiration via a nasogastric tube with ultrasound for assessment of residual gastric volume. Sixty-one adult patients who were mechanically ventilated and received continuous enteral feeding through a nasogastric tube for > 48 h were included. A first qualitative and quantitative ultrasound examination of the gastric antrum was followed by gastric suctioning, performed by an operator blinded to the result of the ultrasound examination. ⋯ Erythromycin infusion did not make a significant difference to gastric volume (n = 10). Our results demonstrate that gastric suctioning is not a reliable tool for monitoring residual gastric volume. Gastric ultrasound is a feasible and promising tool for gastric volume monitoring in clinical practice.
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Coagulopathic bleeding during and after cardiac surgery is associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Viscoelastic testing is increasingly used instead of laboratory testing. Our aim was to compare a new viscoelastic point-of-care device, the Quantra® System, with thromboelastography and standard laboratory testing. ⋯ These Quantra thresholds showed high negative predictive value for low platelets (platelet clot stiffness, 97.4%), prolonged activated partial thromboplastin time (clot time, 92.6%) and reduced maximum amplitude on thromboelastography (clot stiffness, 93.6%). The Quantra predicted clinical need for transfusion of platelets (area under the curve 0.71, p = 0.001) but all tests performed poorly at predicting the need for fresh frozen plasma transfusion. We have shown that point-of-care testing using the novel Quantra system provides useful data for guiding transfusion management.
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Obstructive sleep apnoea and residual neuromuscular blockade are, independently, known to be risk factors for respiratory complications after major surgery. Residual effects of neuromuscular blocking agents are known to reduce the hypoxic ventilatory response in healthy volunteers. ⋯ The hypoxic ventilatory response was reduced by 32% (p = 0.016) during residual neuromuscular block (rocuronium to train-of-four ratio 0.7), but the hypercapnic ventilatory response was unaffected. We conclude that neuromuscular blockade specifically depresses peripheral chemosensitivity, and not respiratory muscle function since the hypercapnic ventilatory response was unaffected.