Regional anesthesia and pain medicine
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 1998
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialPostoperative analgesia in children using preemptive retrobulbar block and local anesthetic infiltration in strabismus surgery.
Postoperative pain management in pediatric strabismus patients is infrequently studied. Pediatric patients can be mobilized earlier if postoperative pain is minimized. In this study, two different regional anesthetic techniques, retrobulbar block and local infiltration, were compared with a "no block" control group for the postoperative management of pain in pediatric patients undergoing elective strabismus surgery. ⋯ Because there was no significant difference in terms of postoperative analgesia in the retrobulbar block or subconjunctival local anesthetic infiltration groups compared with the control group, we suggest that conventional methods of pain treatment are adequate for postoperative analgesia in strabismus surgery.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 1998
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialLocal anesthetic effect of tramadol, metoclopramide, and lidocaine following intradermal injection.
We observed clinically that tramadol and metoclopramide appear to have local anesthetic action. Tramadol is a central-acting analgesic. Metoclopramide is a commonly used antiemetic. The local anesthetic effect of tramadol in reducing propofol injection pain has never been mentioned, although it was speculated with metoclopramide. ⋯ Intradermal tramadol or metoclopramide can produce local anesthetic effect.
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 1998
Editorial Comment Comparative StudyAdditives for epidural analgesia for labor: why bother?
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Reg Anesth Pain Med · Nov 1998
Biography Historical ArticleCarl Ludwig Schleich and the introduction of infiltration anesthesia into clinical practice.