Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Non-parenteral postoperative analgesia. A comparison of sublingual buprenorphine and morphine sulphate (slow release) tablets.
Sixty-nine patients undergoing upper and lower abdominal surgery were studied after operation to compare the analgesic effects of sublingual buprenorphine (0.4 mg) and slow release morphine sulphate tablets (MST, 20 mg) given 6 hourly in a double-blind, double-dummy trial. Both MST and buprenorphine produced satisfactory postoperative analgesia but the linear analogue pain scores were significantly lower on the second post operative day with MST.
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Case Reports
Extensive spread of local anaesthetic solution following subdural insertion of an epidural catheter during labour.
A case is described where a small dose of bupivacaine was accidentally injected into the subdural, extra-arachnoid space resulting in extensive unilateral block and hypotension. The spread of solution was confirmed radiologically.
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A case of glottic valvular obstruction following extubation is reported. The cause was bilateral dislocation of arytenoids due to coughing on the tracheal tube, which resolved automatically following a further bout of coughing.
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The accuracy of the Dinamap 845 automatic blood pressure recorder was assessed by comparing its own indirect determinations of blood pressure with direct intra-arterial recordings. It was found that in the majority of cases it was capable of producing reliable trend information during anaesthesia. The instrument may not be able to interpret pressure signals from a patient with a severe dysrhythmia. It is probably an unsuitable monitor for use with very rapidly acting drugs such as sodium nitroprusside.
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Comparative Study
Midazolam versus atropine plus pethidine as premedication in children.
The effects of oral midazolam or intramuscular atropine and pethidine used as premedication in two groups of 35 children over 5 years of age were studied. There was some evidence that the anxiolytic effect of midazolam was rather better than that of atropine plus pethidine, but, in other respects, subjective assessments in the two patient groups were similar. ⋯ Oral midazolam is a new anxiolytic drug which can be used as an alternative to existing premedicant drugs, but, in children, it should still be combined with an anticholinergic agent. No correlation between serum levels of midazolam or atropine and their clinical effects was found.