Articles: general-anesthesia.
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Aneurysmal rupture represents the most common cause of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Approximately two-thirds of persons who experience a subarachnoid hemorrhage will die or become disabled. ⋯ The anesthetic management of these patients is reviewed, emphasizing principles relating to the facilitation of surgery--by optimizing operative conditions and minimizing the risks of intraoperative aneurysmal rupture or the aggravation of neurologic deficits--and to the provision of a smooth, stable recovery. Despite the disappointing overall prognosis following subarachnoid hemorrhage, adherence to these principles can optimize the outcome for those patients who reach the operating room.
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Thermoregulatory responses in infants and children are now fairly well understood. The phenomenon of heat loss in children during surgery is widely acknowledged. Hypothermia is most likely to occur during long surgical procedures in an air-conditioned operating room, particularly when respiration is controlled. ⋯ Perioperative hypothermia results from decreased metabolic heat production, increased environmental heat loss, redistribution of heat within the body, and anesthesia-induced inhibition of thermoregulation. Radiation and convection from the skin surface combine with evaporation from tissues inside surgical incisions to decrease mean body temperature. Perioperative hypothermia can be limited by prewarming the skin surface before induction of anesthesia, warming the operating room, humidifying the airway, and warming intravenous fluids.
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The possibility of processing sensory information during general anesthesia and the ability to recall it postoperatively is of major ethical, medical and even theoretical importance. Auditory stimuli especially are perceived intraoperatively and remembered postoperatively. Neuropsychological experiments indicate that sensory information can be processed and recalled both at a conscious and at an unconscious level. ⋯ Therefore, future studies should focus on several different points. The anesthetic state should be defined exactly and the functional state of the auditory modality should be monitored when auditory information is presented to the patients. The recollection of intraoperative events should be investigated using implicit memory tests, because these are regarded as more sensitive than explicit memory tests.