Der Anaesthesist
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Midazolam (Dormicum) as oral premedication for local anesthesia].
Good physician-patient rapport and an anxiolytic, sedative, and amnesic premedication are necessary for comfortable, stress-free surgery under local anesthesia. Sufficient experience exists with the intramuscular and intravenous administration of the new benzodiazepine midazolam (Dormicum), while knowledge relating to its oral administration is still scant. Therefore, in a randomized double-blind study midazolam was investigated for oral premedication prior to local anesthesia: two dosages of midazolam were studied and compared with diazepam and placebo. ⋯ Anxiety increased little following the placebo; it decreased significantly following 10 mg diazepam and more markedly following 7.5 and 15 mg midazolam. Sedation increased little following the placebo; it increased more and similarly 50 min after the benzodiazepines; after 90 min the sedative effect was most marked for 15 mg midazolam. However, sedation was of shorter duration after midazolam than after diazepam.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Comparison of fentanyl and tramadol in pain therapy with an on-demand analgesia computer in the early postoperative phase].
17 patients undergoing cholecystectomy in non-opiate general anaesthesia received tramadol (n = 7) or fentanyl (n = 10) for immediate postoperative pain relief using the on-demand analgesia computer (ODAC). Heart rate, blood pressure, and respiratory rate were monitored at half-hourly intervals during the 6-h trial period. Arterial blood was withdrawn at hourly intervals for blood gas analyses and beta-endorphin plasma level assays. ⋯ Respiratory rate, which was elevated initially, dropped significantly in both groups. Arterial pO2 and pCO2 were within the normal range throughout the observation period, reflecting the absence of respiratory side effects. Opiate blood levels showed major inter- and intraindividual variations (minimal and maximal levels for fentanyl ranged from 0.44-3.44 ng/ml, for tramadol from 272-1,900 ng/ml) and were thus poor predictors of the quality of analgesia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Propofol in comparison with etomidate for the induction of anesthesia].
In the present study propofol and etomidate were compared with respect to the effects on the cardiovascular system and its side effects in 100 patients ASA grade I-IV. Anaesthesia was induced with 2.2 mg kg-1 body weight propofol. Supplemented with opioids and benzodiazepins the dose diminished to 1.8 mg kg-1 body weight (18.2%). ⋯ Pain on injection was frequent but thrombosis and phlebitis were not observed. There was a considerably lower incidence of postoperative nausea and vomiting compared with etomidate. The investigators concluded: propofol can be recommended for induction of anaesthesia as an alternative to etomidate.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Lung compliance in man is impaired by the rapid injection of alfentanyl].
To demonstrate opioid-induced muscular rigidity, compliance was measured in patients after induction of anaesthesia with etomidate (0.3 mg/kg) and N2O/O2 (2:1) ventilation. Alfentanil was given subsequently to two groups of patients: either as a bolus injection (n = 15) over 3 s, or as a slow injection (n = 15) over 30 s. Significant reduction of compliance (max. 30%) was observed after rapid injection in the following 4 min. ⋯ The slow injection of the opioid over 30 s, was followed by a small insignificant reduction in compliance. Alfentanil is increasingly used for short-term anaesthesia where no muscle relaxants are administered. Thus slow injection of the opioid is advised in order not to impair adequate ventilation.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Effect of glucocorticoids on extravascular lung water following extra-corporeal circulation].
The influence of 3 different, preoperatively given glucocorticoids (30 mg/kg bw methylprednisolone, 3 mg/kg bw dexamethasone, 30 mg/kg hydrocortisone) on extravascular lung water (EVLW) was investigated in a randomised study consisting of 60 patients undergoing elective aortocoronary bypass surgery and compared to a control group having received 0.9% NaCl as placebo. EVLW-measurements were performed by using the double indicator dilution technique with indocyanine green and a microprocessed lung water computer. Besides EVLW-measurements haemodynamics and various laboratory data were studied before as well as after (15 min, 45 min, 5 h) extracorporeal circulation (ECC). ⋯ Pulmonary gas exchange, too, did not differ statistically, in spite of a less pronounced (p = 0.1) deterioration of paO2 in the dexamethasone-group. Haemodynamics and laboratory data in the corticoid-group did not show any significant difference compared to the non-treated control group. It was concluded, that pretreatment with corticoids in pharmacological doses in cardiac surgery had no beneficial effects on extravascular lung water and pulmonary function.