Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
pH-adjustment and discomfort caused by the intradermal injection of lignocaine.
One hundred adult day-case patients who required intravenous access had cannulae inserted using local anaesthesia with 1% lignocaine, 1% lignocaine with adrenaline or the corresponding pH-adjusted solutions. The local anaesthetic solutions were modified by the addition of 1 ml 8.4% sodium bicarbonate to 10 ml lignocaine. Pain scores at different stages of cannulation were noted and showed a significant reduction after use of pH-adjusted solutions (p less than 0.02 for the plain lignocaine, and less than 0.001 for the lignocaine with adrenaline). Modification of the pH of lignocaine solutions by the addition of sodium bicarbonate is a simple method significantly to reduce the discomfort caused by the infiltration of the local anaesthetic.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The laryngeal mask airway in paediatric anaesthesia.
Forty-eight children, aged between 2 and 10 years, admitted as day cases for otological surgery were allocated at random into two groups. The first group was anaesthetised using a standard facemask, and the second with a laryngeal mask airway. ⋯ Hypoxia was significantly less frequent in the laryngeal airway group (p less than 0.05), and there were significantly fewer interruptions to surgery than in the facemask group (p less than 0.001). Patient safety, operating and anaesthetic conditions were all considered superior in the laryngeal airway group.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Posture and epidural catheter insertion. The relationship between skill, experience and maternal posture on the outcome of epidural catheter insertion.
This study was undertaken to investigate the outcome of epidural catheter insertion in the sitting or lateral position in mothers during labour. An initial prospective randomised study period (144 patients) suggested that the sitting position offered some superiority over the lateral in terms of technical ease of insertion. It was concluded, by minimising the subjective aspects in a follow-up, prospective nonrandomised study period (152 patients), that the determining factor lies in the skill and experience of the anaesthetist. There was no significant difference in complication rates or maternal discomfort between the two positions in either study period.
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The Level 1 blood warmer series comprises three infusion sets and two blood warmers of different power outputs. All systems were found to be extremely efficient, with the larger 500 series capable of warming the equivalent of 80 units of blood an hour almost to body temperature.