Articles: anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Propofol-nitrous oxide versus thiopental-isoflurane-nitrous oxide for general anesthesia.
One hundred and twenty patients undergoing elective operations were randomly assigned to receive anesthesia with either thiopental, 4 mg/kg-isoflurane, 0.2-3%-nitrous oxide, 60-70% (control) or propofol, 2 mg/kg-propofol infusion, 1-20 mg/min-nitrous oxide, 60-70% (propofol). Although anesthetic conditions were similar during the operation, differences were noted in the recovery characteristics. For non-major (superficial) surgical procedures, the times to awakening, responsiveness, orientation, and ambulation were significantly shorter in the propofol group (4 +/- 3, 5 +/- 4, 6 +/- 4, and 104 +/- 36 min) than in the control group (8 +/- 7, 9 +/- 7, 11 +/- 9, and 142 +/- 61 min, respectively). ⋯ Delayed emergence (greater than 20 min), significant psychometric impairment, and a high overall incidence of postoperative side effects (55-60%) were noted in both drug treatment groups. The authors conclude that propofol-nitrous oxide compares favorably to thiopental-isoflurane-nitrous oxide for maintenance of anesthesia during short outpatient procedures. However, for major abdominal operations, propofol anesthesia does not appear to offer any clinically significant advantages over a standard inhalational anesthetic technique.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1988
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialThe cardiovascular effects of anticholinergic agents administered during halothane anaesthesia in children.
The cardiovascular effects of anticholinergic agents administered during halothane anaesthesia were studied in 31 children aged 1-12 years undergoing peripheral orthopaedic surgery. Either normal saline, glycopyrrolate (10 micrograms.kg-1) or atropine (20 micrograms.kg-1) was administered in randomized double-blind fashion during the induction of anaesthesia with halothane while the electrocardiogram was continuously recorded. After induction, the children were paralyzed with atracurium, intubated, and ventilated. ⋯ Junctional rhythm occurred in 74% (14/19) of the children with dysrhythmias, developed early during induction (mean +/- s.d. time = 2.29 +/- 2.0 min after commencement of induction), and usually resolved before the administration of the study drug (8/14). All dysrhythmias initially occurred before or during induction and none developed during intubation, during incision, during the maintenance of anaesthesia, or after the administration of anticholinergic agents. The data suggest that: 1) a combination of factors present during halothane induction is highly dysrhythmogenic especially for junctional rhythm; 2) junctional rhythm will resolve spontaneously; 3) the administration of an anticholinergic agent during halothane induction is safe but may be unnecessary in children greater than 1 year of age; and 4) the dysrhythmogenic factors present during induction are attenuated during the maintenance of halothane anaesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Postoperative pulmonary complications: general anesthesia with postoperative parenteral morphine compared with epidural analgesia.
In a prospective study, patients undergoing abdominal cancer surgery were randomly allocated to receive either general anesthesia with fentanyl intravenously and postoperative analgesia with parenteral morphine (GA group) or general anesthesia combined with epidural bupivacaine and epidural morphine for postoperative pain relief (EP group). Analgesia was tested on a visual pain scale. Pulmonary complications were evaluated by clinical complications, blood gas analysis, x-ray film changes, and pulmonary volumes (vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in 1 second). ⋯ Whatever the criteria used, the rates of pulmonary complications were similar in the two groups: clinical complications 21% versus 26%, radiologic complications 50% versus 64% for GA and EP groups, respectively. Postoperative PaO2 and spirometric values were similar in the two groups. Postoperative epidural analgesia may improve the patient's comfort but does not decrease the incidence of pulmonary complications.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jul 1988
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEffect of total intravenous anaesthesia with midazolam/alfentanil on the adrenocortical and hyperglycaemic response to abdominal surgery.
The effect of anaesthesia on the hyperglycaemic and adrenocortical response induced by surgery was studied in patients undergoing abdominal hysterectomy. The study group was anaesthetized with midazolam and alfentanil using a totally intravenous anaesthetic technique. A reference group received anaesthesia with thiopentone, alfentanil and nitrous oxide. ⋯ During surgery they returned to pre-induction values, and in the postoperative period they increased to about twice the pre-induction values. It is concluded that midazolam/alfentanil anaesthesia is as effective as anaesthesia induced by thiopentone, alfentanil and nitrous oxide in suppressing the stress-response to surgery until the postoperative period. No signs of prolonged adrenocortical depression were observed.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Postoperative analgesia by continuous extradural infusion of bupivacaine and diamorphine.
Three solutions administered by continuous extradural infusion for postoperative analgesia were compared in a randomized, double-blind manner. All patients underwent major abdominal gynaecological surgery and received 0.125% bupivacaine in 0.9% saline, diamorphine in 0.9% saline (0.5 mg in 15 ml) or diamorphine mixed with 0.125% bupivacaine (0.5 mg in 15 ml), at a rate of 15 ml h-1. The bupivacaine-diamorphine mixture provided significantly superior analgesia compared with either bupivacaine or diamorphine alone. No major side effects were encountered.