British journal of anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Isocapnic hyperpnoea accelerates recovery from isoflurane anaesthesia.
Hyperventilation should speed up elimination of volatile anaesthetic agents from the body, but hyperventilation usually results in hypocapnia. We compared recovery from isoflurane anaesthesia in patients allowed to recover with assisted spontaneous ventilation (control) and those treated with isocapnic hyperpnoea. ⋯ Isocapnic hyperpnoea at the end of surgery results in shorter and less variable time to removal of the airway after anaesthesia with isoflurane and nitrous oxide.
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Multicenter Study
Constipation and its implications in the critically ill patient.
Motility of the lower gut has been little studied in intensive care patients. ⋯ Constipation has implications for the critically ill.
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Comparative Study
Comparison of isoflurane and propofol-fentanyl anaesthesia in a swine model of asphyxia.
There have been few studies comparing the response to asphyxia and the effectiveness of typical cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) using exogenous epinephrine administration and manual closed-chest compression between total intravenous anaesthesia (TIVA) and inhalational anaesthesia. ⋯ Although TIVA is less prone than isoflurane anaesthesia to primary cardiovascular depression leading to asphyxia, TIVA is associated with reduced effectiveness of CPR in which resuscitation because of asphyxic haemodynamic depression occurs.
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The spectrum of spinal surgery in adult life is considerable. Anaesthesia for major spinal surgery, such as spinal stabilization following trauma or neoplastic disease, or for correction of scoliosis, presents a number of challenges. The type of patients who would have been declined surgery 20 yr ago for medical reasons, are now being offered extensive procedures. ⋯ The perioperative management of these patients is discussed. The advent of techniques to monitor spinal cord function has reduced postoperative neurological morbidity in these patients. The anaesthetist has an important role in facilitating these methods of monitoring.
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Clinical Trial
Low-dose remifentanil infusion does not impair natural killer cell function in healthy volunteers.
Mu opioid agonists suppress natural killer (NK) cell activity in animal models. Studies in human volunteers, however, have yielded conflicting results, with morphine suppressing and fentanyl increasing NK cell activity. This study evaluated the effect of a constant 8-h infusion of remifentanil on NK cell number and function in human volunteers. ⋯ An 8-h infusion of remifentanil did not affect NK cell activity in normal volunteers. This result differs from previous findings of morphine-induced NK cell activity suppression and fentanyl-induced NK cell activity enhancement in normal volunteers.