Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
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A 54-year-old female patient was scheduled for retroperitoneoscopic nephrectomy. Anesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with nitrous oxide/sevoflurane and epidural anesthesia. One hour after the start of the surgery, arterial oxygen saturation suddenly decreased from 99% to 94%. ⋯ The patient was extubated following thoracocentesis that had improved her pneumothorax and oxygenation. There is no report of pneumothorax in retroperitoneoscopic nephrectomy, as far as we know, although several cases have been reported in laparoscopic nephrectomy. We must be careful of pneumothorax in both laparoscopic and retroperitoneoscopic nephrectomy.
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A 34-year-old obese, small-jawed and short-necked woman, had severe obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS) with bronchial asthma. A surgical removal of a lingual tumor using a laser knife was scheduled under general anesthesia with sevoflurane. A small diameter tracheal tube for laser surgery (internal diameter (ID) of 5.5 mm) was used. ⋯ After confirming that the two tubes were inserted securely, the tube for laser surgery was withdrawn. The patient's ventilation improved significantly afterwards and the extubation was performed successfully. Our method for replacing a tracheal tube seemed to be effective and safe.
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We have previously showed that surgical volume affects mortality due to intraoperative critical incidents among patients undergoing cardiac surgery, the surgery with the highest risk, using data obtained by the annual survey in 2001 conducted by the Japanese Society of Anesthesiologists (JSA). In this study, we investigated whether surgical volume affects mortality due to intraoperative critical incidents independent of the surgical site. ⋯ Surgical volume was shown to affect mortality independent of the surgical site. Hospitals with low surgical volume should pay significant attention to improving surgical outcomes. These results also suggest that centralization or regionalization should be discussed from the perspective of socio-economical problems as well as patient safety.
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Pressure support ventilation (PSV) usually provides good patient-ventilator synchrony, but asynchrony is sometimes encountered. Double breathing is one form of asynchrony in which the ventilator assists two or more times during a single inspiration of the patient. ⋯ Double breathing during PSV was considered to be closely associated with obstructive or restrictive lung. If the problem arises and cannot be resolved by adjusting ventilatory parameters, the ventilatory mode must be changed.
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We investigated vecuronium-induced neuromuscular blockade in patients with continuous epidural lidocaine injection and those without epidural lidocaine. ⋯ Based on our results, we conclude that lidocaine injected continuously into the epidural space potentiates vecuronium-induced neuromuscular block.