Articles: anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Epidural vs general anaesthesia and leg blood flow in patients with occlusive atherosclerotic disease.
Total leg blood flow (plethysmography), skin blood flow (laser-Doppler flowmetry), and haemodynamic stability (MAP, HR, RPP) were studied in vascular (ABI less than 1.0; n = 31) and in non-vascular (ABI greater than 1.0; n = 24) surgical patients during epidural or fentanyl-supplemented general anaesthesia. During epidural anaesthesia significant increases in total leg blood flow were observed in vascular (from 1.9 +/- 0.2 to about 3 ml/100 ml tissue/min) as well as in non-vascular (from 2.5 +/- 0.6 to about 7 ml/100 ml tissue/min) patients and leg blood flow remained high in the postanaesthetic period. During general anaesthesia total leg blood did not increase, either in vascular or in non-vascular patients, and in the postanaesthetic period blood flow values even lower than the initial ones were observed. ⋯ In vascular patients no critical redistribution of blood flow within the limb was observed irrespective of the type of anaesthesia. Good haemodynamic stability could only be maintained in the epidural group. It is concluded that epidural anaesthesia seems to offer considerable advantages over general anaesthesia for high-risk vascular patients during arterial reconstructions since better haemodynamic stability and higher leg blood flow can be achieved.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
High- and low-dose fentanyl anaesthesia: hormonal and metabolic responses during cholecystectomy.
We have compared two groups of patients given low- or high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia. Arterial blood samples were collected for measurement of glucose, free fatty acids (FFA), glycerol, beta-hydroxy-butyrate, insulin, c-peptide, glucagon, human growth hormone (HGH), cortisol and adrenaline concentrations. After induction of anaesthesia, blood concentrations of most of these substances decreased. ⋯ In the group that received high-dose fentanyl anaesthesia the plasma concentrations of almost all the hormones and substances measured remained relatively low. The differences between the two groups during surgery were significant for adrenaline (P less than 0.001) and cortisol (P less than 0.001). High-dose fentanyl appears to block the trauma-induced stress response seen in patients anaesthetized with low dose fentanyl.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Anaesthetic induction with isoflurane or halothane. Oxygen saturation during induction with isoflurane or halothane in unpremedicated children.
The authors performed a randomised, prospective trial in which one junior anaesthetist administered gaseous induction of anaesthesia to 50 unpremedicated children with either isoflurane or halothane in nitrous oxide and oxygen. Arterial oxygen saturation and the electrocardiogram were monitored and the incidence of complications noted. ⋯ Coughing, movement, laryngospasm and sinus tachycardia occurred more frequently with isoflurane. Isoflurane inductions took longer (7.9 as compared with 5.4 minutes, p less than 0.001) and had 4.25 times the number of complications.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Postoperative recovery after general anaesthesia with and without retrobulbar block in retinal detachment surgery.
This study was to determine whether general anaesthesia plus retrobulbar block would be a better anaesthetic technique than general anaesthesia alone in retinal detachment surgery. Twenty-eight patients were allocated randomly to either general anaesthesia with retrobulbar block or general anaesthesia alone. The anaesthetist involved was blinded as to whether a retrobulbar block was performed or not. ⋯ Those who received general anaesthesia plus block recovered significantly more rapidly than those receiving general anaesthesia alone. The time to opening of eyes on command (p less than 0.05), telling the correct date of birth (p less than 0.01), reaching a full recovery score (p less than 0.005) and performing a simple motor task (p less than 0.025) was shorter in patients with general anaesthesia plus block. Thus general anaesthesia plus retrobulbar block was superior to general anaesthesia alone in terms of pain and recovery after operation.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Lignocaine 2% with adrenaline for epidural caesarean section. A comparison with 0.5% bupivacaine.
A randomised double blind controlled trial of freshly prepared 2% lignocaine with 1/200,000 adrenaline and 0.5% plain bupivacaine was conducted on 60 women undergoing elective Caesarean section. The use of the former enabled epidural blockade to above the T6 dermatome to be established in a significantly shorter time than with bupivacaine (p less than 0.005). The quality of sensory blockade and incidence of complications was similar in the two groups. ⋯ Motor blockade was more intense with 2% lignocaine with adrenaline (p less than 0.03). More neonates had moderately depressed Apgar scores (5-7) at one minute in the lignocaine group but this difference was not statistically significant, and there was no difference in the distribution of Apgar scores at 3 minutes. Lignocaine with 1/200,000 adrenaline is a useful alternative to 0.5% plain bupivacaine when it is desired to establish rapidly epidural blockade for Caesarean section.