Articles: anesthesia.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Dec 1990
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialLidocaine local anesthesia for arthroscopic knee surgery.
Forty-five patients were evaluated during knee arthroscopy performed using local anesthesia produced by lidocaine with epinephrine to determine the dose-response relationship for operative analgesia. Serum lidocaine concentrations were also measured. Patients were randomized prospectively to receive 20 mL of 0.5%, 1.0%, or 1.5% lidocaine with epinephrine intraarticularly. ⋯ Serum lidocaine concentrations before and 15, 30, 60, and 120 min after instillation of lidocaine were highest in the 1.5% lidocaine group with a peak concentration of 278 ng/mL. No patient had symptoms of lidocaine toxicity. We recommend that lidocaine concentrations of 1.0% or 1.5% be used when 20 mL is instilled intraarticularly for knee arthroscopy based on patient comfort and absence of lidocaine toxicity.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[The effect of propofol-ketamine anesthesia on hemodynamics and analgesia in comparison with propofol-fentanyl].
Propofol (Diprivan), a modern intravenous hypnotic, produces a reduction in both cardiac index (CI) and mean arterial pressure (MAP). Ketamine (Ketanest), a potent analgesic, in contrast, causes an increase in MAP and CI. The aim of the present study was to investigate whether the combination of propofol and ketamine can give better hemodynamic stability during the induction and maintenance of general anesthesia than propofol used with fentanyl, whose cardiodepressant actions may cumulate. ⋯ Patients in group B showed better vigilance as well as better pain relief postoperatively. The population of the fentanyl group was obviously more deeply sedated and analgesia was still inadequate. In our study general intravenous anesthesia with propofol and ketamine offered the advantages of better analgesia, a higher state of vigilance and the absence of respiratory depression during the postoperative phase compared with the combination of propofol and fentanyl.
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Klin Monbl Augenheilkd · Dec 1990
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[Ocular circulatory changes caused by retrobulbar anesthesia with and without added adrenaline].
In 80 patients, retrobulbar anesthesia (RBA; 5 ml of a lidocaine-bupivacaine mixture with hyaluronidase) with or without addition of adrenaline (after-mixing concentration 1:500,000) was performed preoperatively. In 2 examination series, the acute and medium-term effects of RBA on the following ocular circulatory variables were investigated: ocular pulsation volume (PVoc), systolic ciliary and retinal perfusion pressures or blood pressures, respectively (method: oculo-oscillo-dynamography). ⋯ The lowering of PVoc--which variable is determined mainly by the pulsatile choroidal blood flow--in concert with the lowered ciliary perfusion and blood pressures is indicative of a reduced ciliary blood flow during RBA. Because of the decreased retinal perfusion and blood pressures, there is also a higher risk of reduced blood supply to the retina. Only to some degree, the observed inhibitory RBA effects on ocular circulation can be explained by adrenaline, and to an even smaller degree by the only transient Pio elevation.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Recovery after day-case anaesthesia. A 24-hour comparison of recovery after thiopentone or propofol anaesthesia.
Sixty patients who presented for day-case dilatation and curettage were allocated randomly to receive either thiopentone or propofol for induction and maintenance of anaesthesia. One anaesthetist administered all the anaesthetics whilst all assessments were made by one other. ⋯ There was a significant difference in subjective feelings of tiredness and drowsiness recorded by the two study groups at 24 hours. Memory function assessed by Wechsler logical memory function passages at 24 hours was impaired in the propofol group in comparison to a group of 'reference' subjects.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Uptake and biotransformation of sevoflurane in humans: a comparative study of sevoflurane with halothane, enflurane, and isoflurane.
To compare the volatile anesthetic sevoflurane with halothane, enflurane, and isoflurane on the uptake and biotransformation in humans. ⋯ Accurate determinations of uptake and degradation rate for sevoflurane and three other volatile anesthetics in Japanese patients were obtained. These findings have established that, despite its relatively large MAC (1.71%), sevoflurane has a small uptake due to its low solubility. However, the degradation rate was shown to be as high as 3.3%, resulting in a higher serum fluoride concentration than seen after administration of isoflurane, halothane, and (possibly) enflurane.