Anaesthesia
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We have investigated the relationship between changes in the middle latency auditory evoked potentials during alternating periods of consciousness and unconsciousness produced by propofol infusion combined with spinal anaesthesia for total knee replacement. Eleven patients completed the study, of whom two had recollection of events after the onset of the anaesthetic. ⋯ During successive transitions from unconsciousness to consciousness, awake latencies were slightly higher than those of baseline awake, whereas anaesthetised latencies were similar to the ones obtained during the first period of unconsciousness. The consistent changes demonstrated, suggest that the auditory evoked potentials could represent a reliable indicator of potential awareness during anaesthesia.
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A 39-year-old man developed a unilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve palsy following laryngeal mask airway insertion for a day case procedure.
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An epidural performed for obstetric analgesia was initially characteristic of a subdural block but subsequently behaved as a normal epidural. Radiological confirmation of the catheter having been subdural was established by performing a magnetic resonance imaging scan.
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The effects of two calcium channel blockers (verapamil and nicardipine) on indirectly elicited muscle twitch and possible interactions between these drugs and non-depolarising muscle relaxants (vecuronium, atracurium, pancuronium) were investigated using isolated rat phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparations. Both verapamil 10(-5) M and nicardipine 10(-6) M caused significant depression of twitch amplitude. ⋯ Nicardipine potentiated atracurium-induced neuromuscular block but had no effect on pancuronium- and vecuronium-induced twitch depression. Neostigmine 10(-6) M did not produce any significant changes in the maximal recovery of twitch depression induced with calcium channel blockers and muscle relaxants combinations; also, neostigmine had no effect on maximal recovery time of twitch depression.