Articles: infusions.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Nov 2024
Effect of Ketamine on the Bispectral Index, Spectral Edge Frequency, and Surgical Pleth Index During Propofol-Remifentanil Anesthesia: An Observational Prospective Trial.
Ketamine administration during stable propofol anesthesia is known to be associated with an increase in bispectral index (BIS) but a "deepening" in the level of hypnosis. This study aimed to evaluate the association between the effect-site concentration of ketamine (CeK) and 2 electroencephalogram (EEG)-derived parameters, the BIS and spectral edge frequency (SEF95), after the administration of a ketamine bolus. Secondary aims included investigating the BIS and SEF95 variations with time and changes in the surgical pleth index (SPI). ⋯ Our results show that BIS and SEF95, but not SPI, follow a CeK-dependent trend after administering a ketamine bolus. Interestingly, their peak values were not reached at CeK=1 μg.mL-1, but after several minutes after the drug infusion at CeKs in the 0.2 to 0.5 μg.mL-1 range. This may be explained by the specific pharmacodynamics of ketamine and its varying effects at different concentrations, as well as by the time delay associated with the calculation of the BIS.
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The higher incidence of migraines in women compared with men has led to the inclusion of female animals in pain research models. However, the critical role of the hormonal cycle is frequently overlooked, despite its clear correlation with migraine occurrences. In this study, we show in a rat model of migraine induced by repeated dural infusions of an inflammatory soup (IS) that a second IS (IS2) injection performed in proestrus/estrus (PE, high estrogen) female rats evokes higher cephalic mechanical hypersensitivities than when performed in metestrus/diestrus (MD, low estrogen) or ovariectomized (OV) rats. ⋯ Second inflammatory soup depolarizes neurons in PE and MD but not in OV rats and enhances excitatory synaptic inputs in PE animals to a greater extent compared with MD and OV rats. These findings show that central TCC sensitization triggered by meningeal nociceptor activation and the resulting cephalic hypersensitivity are modulated by the estrous cycle. This highlights the crucial need to account for not just sex, but also the female estrous cycle in pain research.
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A 39 year-old female with a history of Roux-en-Y gastric bypass underwent emergent partial colectomy. Her postoperative analgesic management of a transversus abdominus plane block administered with a combination of bupivacaine and liposomal bupivacaine was ineffective. A bupivacaine thoracic epidural was then placed, which provided significant pain relief. This use of a bupivacaine thoracic epidural infusion following liposomal bupivacaine regional anesthesia demonstrated a case of effective analgesia without the development of local anesthetic systemic toxicity symptoms in a remote hospital setting, where certain laboratory analyses were not readily available.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2024
Optimal Infusion Rate of Norepinephrine for Prevention of Spinal Hypotension for Cesarean Delivery: A Randomized Controlled Trial, Using Up-Down Sequential Allocation.
Norepinephrine has recently been suggested to be as effective as phenylephrine for the prevention of hypotension after spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery. Moreover, compared to phenylephrine, norepinephrine may be superior in maintaining heart rate (HR) and consequently, cardiac output (CO). A recent study demonstrated that norepinephrine given as a single intravenous bolus is approximately 13 times more potent than phenylephrine. However, it is uncertain whether this finding can be applied when these vasopressors are administered as infusions. Therefore, the optimum infusion rate of norepinephrine remains unknown. We aimed to determine the median effective dose (ED50; defined as the rate of vasopressor infusion required to prevent spinal hypotension in 50% of subjects) of both drugs needed to maintain maternal systolic blood pressure within 20% of the baseline after spinal anesthesia for cesarean delivery and to derive the relative potency ratio. ⋯ Norepinephrine is more potent than phenylephrine by a factor of approximately 13 when administered as infusion for equivalent maternal blood pressure control. Based on these findings, we recommend a variable rate prophylactic infusion of norepinephrine to be initiated at 1.9 to 3.8 µg.min-1 for the management of hypotension during cesarean delivery under spinal anesthesia.