British journal of anaesthesia
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Comparative Study
Subarachnoid blockade with bupivacaine. A comparison with cinchocaine.
Subarachnoid anaesthesia was induced in 40 patients with 0.5% bupivacaine 3 ml with no glucose, 5% glucose or 8% glucose, or with hyperbaric cinchocaine. The injections were made in the lateral position and the patients turned supine immediately. The onset, extent and duration of sensory and motor blockade, the quality of anaesthesia, cardiovascular effects, and the frequency of side-effects were studied. ⋯ Cinchocaine produced a longer duration of action at T10 and T12 than the hyperbaric bupivacaine solutions. No advantage was seen when 8% rather than 5% glucose was used. The glucose-free bupivacaine produced intense blockade of long duration and was suitable when a lower level of blockade was adequate for the proposed surgery.
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Case Reports
"Failed intubation" in obstetric anaesthesia. An indication for use of the "Esophageal Gastric Tube Airway".
The management of failure to intubate the trachea during emergency Caesarean section in a 116.7-kg woman is described. General anaesthesia was continued with the aid of a Gordon and Don Michael Esophageal Gastric Tube Airway. The forward displacement of the larynx caused by the tube in the oesophagus improved the patency of the airway.
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Studies with an emulsion formulation of ICI 35 868 (2,6- diisopropylphenol ) indicate that this new formulation has anaesthetic properties in rats and mice, and haemodynamic effects in the mini-pig which are similar to those of the previously available Cremophor formulation. Administration of the emulsion formulation to dogs produced no untoward effect, whereas the Cremophor formulation produced a marked increase in plasma histamine concentration. In the mini-pig, no adverse response was produced by the repeated administration of the emulsion formulation of ICI 35 868, whereas the Cremophor formulation produced anaphylactoid responses when a second injection was given 1 week after an uneventful first exposure to this formulation. Behavioural responses in the rat suggest that the emulsion formulation may produce less discomfort on i.v. injection.
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Letter Case Reports
Atracurium v. suxamethonium in a case of organophosphorous poisoning.
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The potential mutagenicity of isoflurane was investigated by the sister chromatid exchange (SCE) test using peripheral blood lymphocytes from patients before and after anaesthesia. Thirty patients, aged 18-59 yr (median 29.5 yr), were anaesthetized for minor orthopaedic operations with isoflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen for 37-90 min (median 64 min). Venous blood samples were drawn before the induction of anaesthesia, immediately after completion of anaesthesia and on the following day. ⋯ In 11 cigarette-smoking patients (average 10 cigarettes per day), SCE was increased the day after operation when compared with SCE before the induction of anaesthesia (P less than 0.02). This might reflect differences in SCE formation attributable to the patients' smoking habits, but further studies of SCE in cigarette smokers are required to elucidate this. It was concluded that there was no indication, from the SCE test, of a mutagenic effect of short-term exposure to anaesthetic concentrations of isoflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen.