Articles: closed-circuit-anesthesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Efficiency of a circle system for short surgical cases: comparison of desflurane with isoflurane.
Patients undergoing short surgical procedures but requiring ventilation of the lungs were allocated randomly to receive either desflurane or isoflurane by circle absorption system, initially at a high fresh gas flow. The inspired and expired concentrations of the volatile agent were measured and the fresh gas flows reduced to low flow (500 ml min-1 total when FE/FI = 0.8), as measured on a multigas analyser. In patients receiving desflurane (n = 32), the median time at which flows were reduced was 5 min (interquartile range (IQR) 1 min) while with isoflurane (n = 32), the median time was 19 (IQR 12) min. ⋯ In the isoflurane group the concentration continued to decrease during anaesthesia. In the desflurane group the initial decrease was followed by a slow recovery. We conclude that the circle system can be used efficiently for short anaesthetics using desflurane.
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A laboratory study of a new circle system is presented. The inspiratory limb encloses a coaxial tube, delivering fresh gas close to the patient, immediately upstream of the inspiratory one-way valve. ⋯ This is markedly improved by the new system. The advantages of the system are largely independent of respiratory pattern.
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The performance of breathing systems is tested by means of physical lung models. We describe a new lung model, allowing direct measurement of the dead space/tidal volume ratios produced by any breathing system at different fresh gas flows. The model allows a range of different patterns of spontaneous respiration to be studied. Although rebreathing is measured by capnography, the design ensures that the results are unaffected by changes in carbon dioxide inflow, or even calibration drift in the capnograph.