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- Y Hirabayashi, I Matsuda, S Inoue, and R Shimizu.
- Department of Anesthesiology, Jichi Medical School, Tochigi, Japan.
- J Anesth. 1988 Mar 1; 2 (1): 22-7.
AbstractThe relationship between the age and the spread of analgesia from different epidural anesthetic doses was examined by studying analgesic dose responses in cervical epidural analgesia. Two different anesthetic doses (5 ml or 10 ml) of 2% mepivacaine were injected into the cervical epidural space at a constant pressure (80 mmHg) using an intravenous apparatus, and the spread of analgesia to pinprick was assessed. The significant correlation was found between the patient's age and the number of spinal segments blocked (5 ml : r = 0.8498, P < 0.01, 10 ml : r = 0.5988, P < 0.01). The inverse linear relationship was found between the patient's age and the segmental dose requirement (5 ml : r = -0.6754, P < 0.01, 10 ml : r = -0.5784, P < 0.01). Patients under 39 years of age showed a direct relationship between the dose injected and the number of spinal segments blocked, enabling prediction of the number of segments blocked with a given dose of local anesthetic. Doubling the epidural dose approximately doubled the number of spinal segments blocked. The analgesic dose-response relation in patients over 60 years of age differed from that in patients under 39 years of age and doubling the epidural dose did not double the number of spinal segments blocked. Progressively more extensive analgesia was obtained from a given dose of local anesthetic with advancing age. It was difficult to limit the extent of analgesia by injecting a smaller dose of local anaesthetic in the elderly.
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