British journal of anaesthesia
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Effect of i.v. lignocaine on pain and the endocrine metabolic responses after surgery.
Pain intensity, and blood glucose and plasma cortisol concentrations were measured following abdominal hysterectomy in 18 patients allocated randomly to receive either i.v. lignocaine 1.5 mg kg-1 plus 2 mg kg-1 h-1, or saline. The administration of lignocaine resulted in plasma concentrations between 1.5 and 2.0 micrograms ml-1 during the 2-h study period. However, the administration of lignocaine i.v. had no effect on the intensity of pain after surgery, or on the adrenocortical and hyperglycaemic responses to surgery.
-
The pH and volume of gastric aspirate were measured immediately after the induction of anaesthesia in 224 healthy children to determine the effects of decreasing the period of fasting and of giving oral premedicants before anaesthesia. Fasting for less than 4 h was found to increase the volume of gastric aspirate and the risk of developing pulmonary aspiration syndrome. ⋯ There was a significant increase in gastric volume in patients premedicated with temazepam elixir which did not occur in patients given temazepam capsules. These results support the custom of fasting patients for at least 4 h before anaesthesia and indicate that oral premedicants and their vehicles can have significant effects on the stomach.
-
The haemodynamic indices of three patients, who developed abdominal tamponade as a result of intra-abdominal bleeding following liver transplantation, were measured on four occasions as the increased intra-abdominal pressure was released. Hypotension followed the release of the tamponade in all patients and was the result of a decrease in systemic vascular resistance. ⋯ Treatment of hypotension following release of abdominal tamponade by volume replacement alone may be inappropriate and may lead to over-transfusion; adrenaline may be the treatment of choice. Intensive haemodynamic monitoring is advisable.
-
In two groups of anaesthetized dogs, with (n = 28) or without (n = 28) induced intracranial hypertension, we compared the effects on intracranial pressure (ICP) of the rapid administration of mannitol 2 g kg-1 i.v. at PaCO2 2.7, 4.0, 5.3, and 6.7 kPa (n = 7). In dogs with no induced intracranial hypertension, ICP increased during the administration of mannitol, reached a peak at 2 min after infusion, and then gradually decreased (P less than 0.05). More marked changes in ICP were observed in response to higher values of PaCO2 (P less than 0.05). ⋯ This was followed by a more gradual decrease which achieved pre-balloon inflation values 10 min after infusion. We postulate that the absence of the initial increase in ICP is the result of a concomitant decrease in arterial pressure, a reduction in the volume-pressure response of the brain, the failure of mannitol to dilate further the cerebral arterial vascular bed and a hitherto unnoticed early water-drawing effect. Our study confirmed the safety of rapidly expanding the circulating blood volume with mannitol in circumstances of increased ICP in dogs.
-
Antagonism of atracurium-induced neuromuscular blockade with neostigmine (one or two doses of 2.5 mg) was compared, using electromyography, with spontaneous recovery. Two levels of blockade were studied, one in which the initial response of the train-of-four has reached 10% of control and the other 50% of control. Adequate recovery was considered to be present when the ratio of the fourth response to the first (train-of-four ratio) had reached 70%. ⋯ This acceleration of recovery after neostigmine was most marked with the greater degree of blockade, but two doses of neostigmine were no more effective than one. Spontaneous recovery to the train-of-four ratio of 70% was slow, in the order of 1 h after an initial dose of 0.5 mg kg-1 and 45 min after incremental doses of 0.2 mg kg-1. It is concluded that antagonism of atracurium with one dose of neostigmine is usually desirable, that two doses are unnecessary, and that spontaneous recovery is slower than is generally realized.