Articles: general-anesthesia.
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Heat loss during anesthesia and operation and subsequent hypothermia will increase the postoperative oxygen demand and may endanger patients with restricted cardiopulmonary reserves. Forty patients scheduled for intra-abdominal aortic surgery and 40 patients scheduled for peripheral vascular surgery on the lower limbs were investigated using a warming blanket, humidified heated inspired anesthetic gases at 37-40 degrees C, or both these methods together. A fourth group of patients received no active warming. ⋯ The combination of humidified and heated inspired gases and a warming blanket gave significantly better heat preservation after 40 min (P less than 0.05). Patients undergoing peripheral vascular surgery had similar but smaller drops in temperature with the different types of warming procedures employed. The differences in temperature between the intra-abdominal and extra-abdominal operations were statistically significant after 3 h (P less than 0.05).
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1984
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialHypotensive anesthesia, thromboprophylaxis and postoperative thromboembolism in total hip arthroplasty.
A prospective study was performed in 120 patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty. The patients were randomly allocated to four groups. The first two groups had nitroprusside-induced hypotensive anesthesia with either a fixed combination of sodium heparin and dihydroergotamine mesylate (HDHE) or dextran 70. ⋯ There was a lower incidence of pulmonary embolism in patients with HDHE and normotensive anesthesia. Major wound hematomas were noted postoperatively in 12% of the patients receiving HDHE, whereas no major hematomas developed following dextran prophylaxis. No anaphylactic reaction was noted from dextran 70, using hapten-dextran prophylaxis.