• Surgery today · Jan 1998

    The effect of combined epidural and light general anesthesia on stress hormones in open heart surgery patients.

    • B K Chae, H W Lee, K Sun, Y H Choi, and H M Kim.
    • Department of Anesthesia, Korea University, Seoul, Korea.
    • Surg. Today. 1998 Jan 1;28(7):727-31.

    AbstractThis study was designed to evaluate the potential advantages of combined epidural and light general anesthesia over the commonly employed general anesthesia during open heart surgery. Twenty-four patients undergoing mitral valve replacement were thus studied. General anesthesia was maintained with an isoflurane-nitrous oxide-oxygen was mixture and morphine sulfate (0.4 mg/kg i.v. initially) followed by postoperative pain control with morphine in 12 patients (group GA). The remaining 12 patients (group EAA) received continuous epidural bupivacaine (0.125%)-morphine (50 micrograms/ml) supplemented with the same gas mixture as group GA. Epidural infusion was continued until the third postoperative day. Changes in the serum cortisol and beta-endorphin levels together with postoperative pain relief defined as good (scale 0-2), fair (3-4), or poor (5-10) were observed serially. Lower cortisol levels were observed in group EAA than in group GA (P < 0.05) just before skin closure, on the second and the third postoperative day. The beta-endorphin levels were substantially lower in group EAA than in group GA throughout the observation. The pain scores were good in 2 patients (17%), fair in 6 (50%), and poor in 4 (33%) for group GA, and good in 8 (67%), fair in 3 (25%), and poor in 1 (8%) for group EAA. We thus conclude that a combined epidural and light general anesthesia is considered to attenuate the stress response and thereby provides a better quality of postoperative pain control.

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