Articles: anesthesia.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Jun 1979
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialPostoperative arterial oxygen tension after peroperative PEEP-ventilation.
Forty otherwise healthy patients (29 women and 11 men), undergoing elective cholecystectomy, were randomly allocated to be ventilated during the operation either with a positive end-expiratory pressure of 1 kPa (10 cmH2O) (PEEP group) or with intermittent positive pressure ventilation without PEEP (control group). During the operation the mean arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) in the PEEP group increased from 14.6 to 16.5 kPa, while no changes occurred in the control group (13.5 and 13.6 kPa). On the first postoperative day, PaO2 decreased by 12% of the preoperative values in the PEEP group; the decrease was 20% in the control group. ⋯ In the postoperative period, no statistically significant difference in PaO2 could be demonstrated between the groups. Determinations of the forced vital capacity and forced expiratory volume in the first second showed no difference between the groups pre- or postoperatively. The present study demonstrated no clinically relevant beneficial effect of peroperative PEEP ventilation on the postoperative arterial hypoxaemia after an upper abdominal laparotomy.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Postoperative analgesia after circumcision. A randomized comparison between caudal analgesia and intramuscular morphine in boys.
A randomised blind comparison between caudal analgesia (1.5 mg/kg bupivacaine) and intramuscular morphine (0.15 mg/kg) is reported. Forty boys were studied. Caudal analgesia is shown to be significantly better than morphine by means of a linear analogue scale designed to quantify behaviour immediately after operation.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Intravenous regional analgesia using bupivacaine. A double blind comparison with lignocaine.
A double-blind comparison of bupivacaine and lignocaine for intravenous regional analgesia (Bier's block) was carried out in seventy-two patients presenting for upper limb surgery. Thirty-eight patients received lignocaine and thirty-four received bupivacaine. ⋯ The degree of both analgesia and muscle relaxation was significantly better in the bupivacaine group. Adverse effects were seen only in patients who had received lignocaine and these were unrelated to the tourniquet time.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Substrate mobilisation during surgery. A comparison between halothane and fentanyl anaesthesia.
A study was undertaken in twenty-eight patients to compare the effects of the supplementation of nitrous oxide and oxygen anaesthesia with either 0.5--1.0% halothane or 50 microgram fentanyl/kg on the metabolic and hormonal response to gynaecological surgery. The results showed that the increases in blood glucose, plasma cortisol and growth hormone concentrations observed in the halothane group of patients were abolished in those who received fentanyl. It is postulated that the ability of large doses of fentanyl to inhibit the cortisol and growth hormone response to surgery may be of value in ameliorating the catabolic response to trauma.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine for Cesarean section: neonatal blood levels and neurobehavioral responses.
A recent study found no neurobehavioral change in infants whose mothers received bupivacaine epidural anesthesia (112 +/- 7 mg) for labor and vaginal delivery. The present study was undertaken to examine the possibility that the larger doses of bupivicaine necessary for cesarean section might cause neurobehavioral changes in the neonate. Ten infants delivered by cesarean section with bupivacaine epidural anesthesia (168 +/- 7 mg) was assessed by Scanlon's neonatal neurobehavioral examination. ⋯ By 24 hours of age bupivacaine was no longer detectable in newborn blood samples. Infants in the experimental group were indistinguishable from control infants in terms of their motor organization, responsiveness to external stimuli, and habituation to repetitive stimuli. Detectable neurobehavioral effects were absent despite the fact that 1.5 times the dose of bupivacaine used for labor and vaginal delivery was employed in this study.