British journal of anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Evaluation of pre-emptive intramuscular phenylephrine and ephedrine for reduction of spinal anaesthesia-induced hypotension during Caesarean section.
Pre-emptive intramuscular (i.m.) vasopressors were evaluated in 108 patients undergoing elective Caesarean section under spinal anaesthesia, assigned to four groups in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study. Group 1 received pre-emptive phenylephrine 4 mg i.m., group 2 received phenylephrine 2 mg i.m., group 3 received ephedrine 45 mg i.m., while controls received an i.m. injection of saline, all given immediately after induction of spinal anaesthesia. Hypotension was defined as a 25% decrease in mean arterial pressure (MAP). ⋯ The phenylephrine 4 mg and ephedrine 45 mg groups had a significantly lower percentage reduction in MAP (-21 (SD 14)% and -22 (14)%) compared with controls (-32 (18)%, P=0.04). They also had a lower total dose of rescue i.v. ephedrine (15.7 (15.7) mg and 15.8 (15.6) mg) compared with controls (28.8 (20.6) mg, P=0.02). We conclude that pre-emptive i.m. phenylephrine 4 mg and ephedrine 45 mg reduce the severity of hypotension and the total dose of rescue i.v. ephedrine during spinal anaesthesia for Caesarean section.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
I.v. ketoprofen for analgesia after tonsillectomy: comparison of pre- and post-operative administration.
We have evaluated the safety and efficacy of ketoprofen during tonsillectomy in 106 adults receiving standardized anaesthesia. Forty-one patients received ketoprofen 0.5 mg kg(-1) at induction ('pre' ketoprofen group) and 40 patients after surgery ('post' ketoprofen group), in both cases followed by a continuous ketoprofen infusion of 3 mg kg(-1) over 24 h; 25 patients received normal saline (placebo group). Oxycodone was used for rescue analgesia. ⋯ Patients in the placebo group received significantly more oxycodone doses than patients in the two ketoprofen groups (P=0.001). Two patients (5%) in the 'pre' ketoprofen group and one (3%) in the 'post' ketoprofen group had post-operative bleeding between 4 and 14 h. All three patients required electrocautery.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Post-operative recovery after inguinal herniotomy in ex-premature infants: comparison between sevoflurane and spinal anaesthesia.
We prospectively studied the post-operative recovery profile of 28 ex-premature infants undergoing inguinal herniotomy. All infants had a post-conceptual age of less than 46 weeks at the time of surgery and were randomized to receive either sevoflurane (group 1, 14 patients) or spinal anaesthesia (group 2, 14 patients). All patients received supplemental caudal analgesia before skin incision. ⋯ None of the remaining patients in group 2 demonstrated an unacceptable number of post-operative cardiorespiratory complications. Our limited study suggests that general anaesthesia with an inhalational agent such as sevoflurane may induce or unmask abnormalities of cardiopulmonary function in predisposed infants. Spinal anaesthesia may be preferable but it is potentially stressful for the infant and associated with a clinically significant failure rate.