British journal of anaesthesia
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Pre-emptive analgesic efficacy of tramadol compared with morphine after major abdominal surgery.
Studies of pre-emptive analgesia in humans have shown conflicting results. This prospective, randomized, double-blind, controlled study was designed to test the hypothesis that a reduction in postoperative morphine consumption can be achieved by tramadol administered after induction of anaesthesia. ⋯ Tramadol (1 mg kg(-1)), administered after induction of anaesthesia, offered equivalent postoperative pain relief, and similar recovery times and postoperative PCA morphine consumption compared with giving morphine 0.1 mg kg(-1). These results also suggest that presurgical exposure to systemic opioid analgesia may not result in clinically significant benefits .
-
The motivation for this study was the current difficulty in estimating the total age-related MAC for a patient in a clinical setting. ⋯ The iso-MAC charts show clearly how patient age can be used to guide the choice of end-expired agent concentration. They also allow a consistent total MAC to be maintained when changing the inspired nitrous oxide concentration, thereby reducing the chance of inadvertent awareness, particularly at the extremes of age.
-
Clinical Trial
Effects of magnesium sulphate on cerebral haemodynamics in healthy volunteers: a transcranial Doppler study.
Magnesium is increasingly being considered as a neuroprotective agent. We aimed to study its effects on middle cerebral artery blood flow velocity (V(mca)), cerebral autoregulation and cerebral vascular reactivity to carbon dioxide (CRCO(2)) in healthy volunteers. ⋯ Infusion of magnesium sulphate, in a dose that doubles its concentration in plasma, does not affect V(mca), strength of autoregulation or CRCO(2) in healthy volunteers. However, it can be associated with nausea and hypotension.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Plasma substitution effects of a new hydroxyethyl starch HES 130/0.4 compared with HES 200/0.5 during and after extended acute normovolaemic haemodilution.
The volume expansion effect of a recently introduced hydroxyethyl starch, HES 130/0.4, was compared with the commonly used HES 200/0.5 after rapid infusion of a single large dose (up to 2 litres) administered during acute normovolaemic haemodilution (ANH). ⋯ This study demonstrates a good immediate and medium-term plasma volume substitution effect of HES 130 compared with HES 200. HES 130 could represent a suitable synthetic colloid for plasma volume substitution during extensive ANH.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Emetic effects of morphine and piritramide.
Successful management of postoperative pain requires that adequate analgesia is achieved without excessive adverse effects. Opioid-induced nausea and vomiting is known to impair patients' satisfaction, but there are no studies providing sufficient power to test the hypothesis that the incidence of opioid-induced nausea and vomiting differs between micro -opioid receptor agonists. Thus, we tested the hypothesis that the incidence of vomiting and nausea differs between morphine and piritramide. ⋯ Opioid-induced emesis was observed in about one-third of the patients using morphine and piritramide for PCA and the incidence of vomiting was one-half of that. Potential differences in the incidence of vomiting during PCA therapy between these micro-opioid receptor agonists can be excluded.