Anaesthesia
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A nasogastric tube was used to aspirate air insufflated into the stomach during intermittent positive pressure ventilation through a laryngeal mask airway and a tracheal tube. No difference was found in the amount aspirated between patients with a tracheal tube, a laryngeal mask airway with the nasogastric tube closed or a laryngeal mask airway with the nasogastric tube open, when the nasogastric tube was aspirated at 15 min intervals for the first hour of anaesthesia.
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A twin-tube breathing system for inhalational anaesthesia in dental surgery is described. The system is a modification of a parallel Mapleson 'A' breathing system and is suitable for use with continuous flow anaesthetic machines. ⋯ The system is suitable for children and adults, easy to use and efficient. The expiratory valve is located remote from the face and the system is suitable for scavenging by active, assisted or passive systems.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Pre-oxygenation: the Hudson mask as an alternative technique.
The use of a simple oxygen facemask (Hudson) with high oxygen inflow (48 l.min-1) was investigated as a technique for pre-oxygenation, comparing it with the Magill system (oxygen flow: 100 ml.kg-1.min-1). One hundred and thirty-eight patients scheduled for elective gynaecological and orthopaedic surgery were studied: group 1, Hudson mask and group 2, Magill system (ASA 1-2, n = 107); group 3, Hudson mask and group 4, Magill system (ASA 3, n = 30). Pre-oxygenation was assessed by measuring the times to 97%, 95% and 93% arterial desaturation (finger pulse oximetry) following 3 min of pre-oxygenation. The times taken to achieve these end-points in all the study groups suggest that the Hudson mask offers an alternative technique for pre-oxygenation.