Articles: anesthesia.
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J Cardiothorac Anesth · Dec 1988
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyPrebypass hemodynamic stability of sufentanil-O2, fentanyl-O2, and morphine-O2 anesthesia during cardiac surgery: a comparison of cardiovascular profiles.
Cardiovascular responses and the need for intervention with vasoactive agents were measured prospectively in a randomized study of 50 adult patients receiving sufentanil (n = 20), fentanyl (n = 20), or morphine (n = 10) anesthesia for cardiac surgery. Measurements were recorded and compared during induction and prebypass at intervals during which airway or surgically induced stress responses were likely to be greatest. Randomized, double-blinded doses of opioids were administered slowly and titrated according to clinical responses (hemodynamics) and the electroencephalogram. ⋯ Pharmacologic intervention was made when systolic arterial pressure deviated more than 30% from pre-event values and was uncontrolled by additional opioids. Interventions were necessary more often in patients receiving morphine (nine of ten) or fentanyl (12 of 20) than in patients receiving sufentanil (six of 20), P < 0.05. Results from this study suggest that morphine is a relatively unsatisfactory anesthetic, while sufentanil and fentanyl, at equi-anesthetic depths, provide stable and satisfactory hemodynamics.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Frequency and severity of throat complaints following general anesthesia with the insertion of various endotracheal tubes].
Laryngeal and pharyngeal complaints following general anaesthesia are well-known problems. The frequency, extent, and intensity reported in several studies are at variance. Such transient postoperative problems should not be considered equivalent to traumatic airway injuries caused by endotracheal intubation. ⋯ The patients of groups A-D underwent oral intubation using lidocaine gel 2%; adequate cuff inflation was determined just after intubation. The patients were questioned every 24 h for 2 days postoperatively using an analogue scale and "open" and "closed" questions. The single groups were comparable in age, sex, height, weight, number of smokers, duration of operation (only groups A-D), and preoperative diseases of the upper airways.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Clin Otolaryngol Allied Sci · Dec 1988
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialLocal versus general anaesthetic in the management of the fractured nose.
Displaced fractured noses are usually manipulated under general anesthetic. The appearances of fractured noses were assessed and the airways measured by rhinomanometry before and after nasal manipulation in 29 patients. Seventeen received a local anaesthetic (LA) and 12 a general anaesthetic (GA) for the manipulation. ⋯ Bony manipulation did not affect the nasal airway. Local anaesthesia was acceptable to all but one patient. The benefits, including those of cost and safety, of local anaesthetic for manipulation of almost all fractured noses are discussed.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Complaints in the postoperative phase related to anesthetics].
In two prospective, randomized studies the frequency of headache, nausea, vomiting, and analgesic requirement during the first postoperative 24 h was observed in order to study differences between the sexes and the inhalation anesthetics halothane, enflurane, isoflurane, or balanced anesthesia with enflurane/alfentanil. Nausea and vomiting were more frequent after enflurane than after halothane or isoflurane. There was no significant difference between anesthetics and frequency of headache, but there were significant differences in postoperative analgesic requirements which were highest after halothane and lowest after isoflurane. ⋯ The second study indicated that balanced anesthesia did not reduce the analgesic requirement compared to enflurane without alfentanil, but lead to a higher incidence of vomiting. After premedication with flunitrazepam and atropine and combined with 70% N2O/30% O2, isoflurane was the most favorable anesthetic agent with regard to the parameters studied. Balanced anesthesia with enflurane/alfentanil did not show any advantages for patients in the postoperative phase under the given conditions.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Use of i.m. ranitidine for the prophylaxis of aspiration pneumonitis in obstetrics.
Twenty patients who underwent elective Caesarean section received ranitidine 150 mg by mouth 8-14 h, and 50 mg i.m. 90 min, before surgery. Intraoperative gastric aspiration resulted in contents with a pH greater than 2.5 and volume less than 25 ml in all patients (mean pH 6.5 (SD 0.8); mean volume 9.0 (SD 7.2) ml). Sixty patients in labour, who received ranitidine 50 mg i.m. 6-hourly, underwent emergency surgery. ⋯ Ranitidine medication resulted in a mean aspirated gastric volume of 31.4 (26.6) ml and pH of 5.3 (2.1); five of 30 patients had a pH less than 2.5. The addition of sodium citrate 0.3 mol litre-1 resulted in gastric pH greater than 2.5 in all patients and a mean gastric volume of 43.2 (38.3) ml. The group who received only sodium citrate 0.3 mol litre-1 had a mean pH of 5.3 (1.1) and a mean volume 122.7 (98.2) ml.