Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 1989
Maintenance of oxygenation during one-lung ventilation. Effect of intermittent reinflation of the collapsed lung with oxygen.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect on oxygenation of intermittent inflation with oxygen of the collapsed lung during one-lung ventilation (OLV). Sixteen patients were studied during pulmonary surgery. Balanced anesthesia with nitrous oxide and an inspired oxygen fraction of 0.5 was used. ⋯ PaO2 increased more than 4 kPa following each inflation in seven patients. In the eighth, PaO2 remained high throughout OLV. Although PaO2 decreased between inflations, it never reached the level observed in controls during 19 minutes of OLV.
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The wall temperatures of the absorptive chambers of a divided soda lime canister were measured in 70 patients to determine the relationship between the difference in temperature of the two chambers and CO2 passage through the first chamber. CO2 passage through the first chamber was detected when the temperature of the second chamber became equal to that of the first. ⋯ When the maximal absorptive capacity of soda lime was reached, the pH of the surface of soda lime granules was still too high to change the indicator color. Exhaustion of soda lime is more reliably recognized by measuring wall temperatures of the chambers than by observing color change of the soda lime granules.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jun 1989
Intravenous magnesium sulfate inhibits catecholamine release associated with tracheal intubation.
The effects of pre-treatment with 60 mg/kg body weight magnesium sulfate intravenous on cardiovascular responses and catecholamine release associated with tracheal intubation were measured in 15 normal patients and in 15 saline solution pre-treated controls. Magnesium pre-treatment increased heart rate by 13 +/- 3.9 beats/minute. After intubation, heart rate was unchanged in the magnesium group at 107.3 +/- 3.6 beats/minute but increased in the control group to 120.9 +/- 4.6 beats/minute (P less than 0.05). ⋯ In controls, norepinephrine levels increased from 273.3 +/- 39.1 mg/ml to 944.6 +/- 68.7 pg/ml (P less than 0.05 for differences between groups). Epinephrine levels were unchanged from baseline after magnesium but in controls increased from 113.9 +/- 19.5 to 279.6 +/- 92.3 pg/ml (P less than 0.05). We conclude that magnesium sulfate attenuates the catecholamine mediated responses after tracheal intubation.