Ophthalmic surgery
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The effect of the laryngeal mask airway on coughing after eye surgery under general anesthesia.
Twenty-nine patients scheduled for elective eye surgery under general anesthesia were randomized into two groups, A and B. After induction of anesthesia, the airway of those in group A was maintained with a conventional tracheal tube; in group B, with a laryngeal mask airway. In the immediate postoperative period, 13 of the 14 patients in group A coughed; none of those in group B did (P < .001).
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
O2 administration by a nasal probe improves respiration in cataract surgery after retrobulbar anesthesia.
We measured certain respiratory conditions (respiratory rate [RR], oxygen saturation [SO2], and end-expiratory carbon dioxide partial pressure [pCO2]) of 31 patients undergoing planned cataract surgery using local anesthesia in order to determine the effects of administering pure oxygen (3 L/min) by a nasal probe in 10 of them. In the patients who did not receive pure oxygen, at the end of surgery the mean RR was 15.8 +/- 4.4/min (maximum, 21; minimum, 6.4/min); the mean SO2 was 86.9% +/- 6.6% (maximum, 98%; minimum, 74%; in 11/25 patients, the SO2 was lower than 90%); and the mean pCO2 was 34.9 +/- 7.7 mm Hg (maximum, 46.5; minimum, 12.15; in 4/25 patients, the pCO2 was greater than 45 mm Hg). In the patients who received pure oxygen by a nasal probe, the mean SO2 increased intraoperatively from 80.6% +/- 5.8% to 96.9 +/- 2.9% (in no patients was SO2 lower than 90%). Therefore we recommend an intraoperative administration of pure oxygen by a nasal probe.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Evaluation of local anesthesia agents using a new force-sensitive lid speculum.
Three commonly used injection anesthetics, bupivacaine .75%, mepivacaine 2%, and lidocaine 2% were evaluated for onset, completeness and duration of akinesia following modified O'Brien facial nerve block, using a new force-sensitive lid speculum. All three agents provided facial akinesia that was profound within six minutes of the time of injection. The onset and the depth of anesthesia were roughly the same with all three agents. ⋯ Akinesia produced by mepivacaine was adequate for about 90 minutes, and lidocaine for 15-30 minutes. A newly-described force-sensitive speculum was utilized in this study. It is an effective instrument for measuring completeness of akinesia, and may have clinical usefulness.