Articles: general-anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Ingestion of clear fluids is safe for adolescents up to 3 h before anaesthesia.
We have studied the effect of ingestion of unlimited clear fluids by adolescents up to 3 h before anaesthesia to determine the effect this fluid ingestion would have on thirst, hunger and gastric contents at induction of anaesthesia. We studied prospectively 152 adolescents (ages 13-19 yr) undergoing elective surgery. Fifty percent of the patients had nothing by mouth after midnight. ⋯ GV, GpH and subject hunger were unaffected by ingestion of clear fluids. Subject thirst was reduced by clear fluids. It is concluded that unlimited clear fluid ingestion by healthy adolescents up to 3 h before operation decreases thirst and does not affect gastric contents.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Long-term cognitive and social sequelae of general versus regional anesthesia during arthroplasty in the elderly.
This study compared the effects of general and regional anesthesia on cognitive and psychosocial functioning in elderly persons. Sixty-four patients between 60 and 86 yr of age undergoing knee arthroplasty were randomly assigned to receive either general or regional anesthesia. ⋯ The results indicated that there were no cognitive or psychosocial effects of general or regional anesthesia after 3 months in elderly persons undergoing knee arthroplasty. In this patient population, general anesthesia poses no more risk to long-term mental function than regional anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
The laryngeal mask airway in paediatric anaesthesia.
Forty-eight children, aged between 2 and 10 years, admitted as day cases for otological surgery were allocated at random into two groups. The first group was anaesthetised using a standard facemask, and the second with a laryngeal mask airway. ⋯ Hypoxia was significantly less frequent in the laryngeal airway group (p less than 0.05), and there were significantly fewer interruptions to surgery than in the facemask group (p less than 0.001). Patient safety, operating and anaesthetic conditions were all considered superior in the laryngeal airway group.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Effects of anesthesia on higher brain functions in the elderly].
Sixty-four patients aged over 60 about to undergo elective surgery of the lower limbs were allocated at random to two groups, one with general anaesthesia, the other with local/regional anaesthesia, in order to compare the effects of these two types of anaesthesia on superior brain functions. The two groups were similar in age, disease, treatment and risk from anaesthesia. ⋯ The score decreased to pathological values (less than or equal to 20) in 4 patients from the local/regional anaesthesia group, and this fall was associated with trans- and postoperative incidents (haemorrhage, cardiorespiratory arrest, confusion after receiving pethidine, cardiac decompensation). This study shows that alterations of the superior brain functions are probably related to trans and postoperative incidents rather than to the type of anaesthesia administered.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Postoperative analgesic requirements in patients exposed to positive intraoperative suggestions.
To establish whether positive suggestions given to a patient under general anaesthesia reduce postoperative pain and analgesic requirements. ⋯ Positive intraoperative suggestions seem to have a significant effect in reducing patients' morphine requirements in the early postoperative period.