Anaesthesia
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Twenty-five patients underwent epidural anaesthesia with a new formulation of chloroprocaine 3% (1.0-1.5 ml x 10 cm body height-1) for a variety of day procedures. The mean (range) duration of surgery was 17 (5-35) min. ⋯ Two patients complained of severe backache immediately after operation and a further 16 and four patients reported mild or moderate backache respectively. Operating conditions were excellent in all but one patient and 23 patients said they would be happy to have the same anaesthetic again.
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Comparative Study
A comparison of keyed and non-keyed vaporizer filling modes and volatile agent wastage.
Two hundred and forty bottles of enflurane were collected after their contents had been emptied into vaporizers equipped with keyed or non-keyed filling ports. The volume of agent remaining, the residual volume, was measured. There was a greater (p < 0.001) residual volume in 'empty' bottles which had been used to fill keyed compared with non-keyed enflurane vaporizers. ⋯ There was no significant difference between the residual volume remaining in bottles of isoflurane and enflurane used to fill keyed fillers; however, the difference was statistically significant if the residual volume was expressed as a proportion to the volume of agent contained in the full bottle. The results show that volatile anaesthetic agent wastage is increased by the use of keyed fillers. Isoflurane wastage caused by utilisation of keyed fillers could be reduced by a factor of 2.5 by supplying isoflurane in 250 ml rather than 100 ml bottles.
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The uptake of isoflurane at a constant end-expired concentration of 1.5% in oxygen was studied in 15 women, ASA 1 or 2, undergoing elective total abdominal hysterectomy. The anaesthetic was administered by a simple computer-controlled to-and-fro closed system. ⋯ Perturbations from this bi-exponential decline reflect changes in cardiac output. The mean (SD) cumulative use of isoflurane was 4.5 (0.43) ml after 30 min and 7.3 (0.79) ml after 60 min.
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A 30-week newborn patient presented with acute respiratory obstruction due to a large pharyngeal teratoma. At laryngoscopy no view of the larynx was obtained, and a tracheal tube was unintentionally passed blindly into the oesophagus. This relieved the obstruction by anterior displacement of the mass.