Articles: opioid-analgesics.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Efficacy of the extradural administration of lofentanil, buprenorphine or saline in the management of postoperative pain. A double-blind study.
Sixty postoperative orthopaedic patients were randomly assigned to three equal groups to study, in a double-blind fashion, the analgesic effects, durations of action and side effects of the extradural administration of lofentanil 5 micrograms, buprenorphine 0.3 mg or physiological saline. No systemic analgesics were given before, during or after surgery, and all the patients had operations on the lower extremities under extradural analgesia (lignocaine and bupivacaine). ⋯ We observed a long duration of action and a marked analgesic effect with lofentanil, a shorter duration of action and less pain suppression with buprenorphine and a rather marked placebo effect after saline. The only side effect noticed in this study was drowsiness in three patients in the lofentanil group and in two patients in the buprenorphine group.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Alfentanil in minor gynaecological surgery: use with etomidate and a comparison with halothane.
Etomidate was used to induce anaesthesia in 50 healthy subjects undergoing minor gynaecological surgery who were randomly divided into two groups, one receiving alfentanil 8 micrograms/kg intravenously immediately prior to induction of anaesthesia with etomidate, and the other halothane as required to maintain adequate anaesthesia. There was a highly significant reduction in the incidence of myoclonia and involuntary movement and significant reduction of pain on injection in the alfentanil group. Tests of recovery performed in the 60 minutes following anaesthesia suggested that supplementation with alfentanil led to more rapid recovery than halothane.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The analgesic effect of a low dose of alfentanil.
The effect of a single small dose of alfentanil (6 micrograms/kg) on postoperative pain was compared with saline using a double blind study. Pain was assessed using a linear analogue scale and shown to decrease at 2, 5 and 10 minutes after injection of alfentanil (p less than 0.01). ⋯ There were no changes in pain or PE'CO2 in the control group throughout the study. Intravenous alfentanil given to patients in pain provides quick effective analgesia for a short period of time, but respiratory depression may occur.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Feb 1982
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialEpidural morphine for postoperative pain relief: a comparative study with intramuscular narcotic and intercostal nerve block.
The relatively new technique of epidural morphine analgesia was compared with two well established method of pain relief in 90 patients undergoing gallbladder surgery and divided randomly into three groups of 30 patients each. The first group received intramuscular narcotic analgesic ketobemidone, the second group was given 0.5% bupivacaine-epinephrine intercostal nerve block, and the third group received a single dose of 4 mg of epidural morphine for postoperative pain relief. The mean duration of analgesia after ketobemidone was 5.5 hours, and after intercostal block 11 hours. ⋯ Delayed respiratory depression was not encountered after epidural morphine. It is concluded that a single dose of 4 mg of epidural morphine provides excellent regional analgesia of long duration without drowsiness or circulatory of respiratory depression thus facilitating early ambulation. The technique is superior to more common methods of pain relief after gallbladder surgery, e.g., intercostal nerve block and intramuscular narcotics.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
A comparison of alfentanil and fentanyl in short operations with special reference to their duration of action and postoperative respiratory depression.
Ninety women undergoing short gynaecological operations were included in a double-blind comparison of fentanyl and alfentanil, a structurally related and very short-acting narcotic analgesic. Anaesthesia was induced by methohexitone followed by a double-blind injection of either alfentanil (0.5 mg/ml) or fentanyl (0.05 mg/ml). ⋯ Cardiovascular parameters remained stable with both analgesics. There were no troublesome side-effects.