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Anesthesia and analgesia · Feb 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialUptake of desflurane and isoflurane during closed-circuit anesthesia with spontaneous and controlled mechanical ventilation.
- J F Hendrickx, M Soetens, A Van der Donck, H Meeuwis, F Smolders, and A M De Wolf.
- Department of Anesthesiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pennsylvania, USA.
- Anesth. Analg. 1997 Feb 1;84(2):413-8.
AbstractAlthough theoretical models predict uptake of inhaled anesthetics during closed-circuit anesthesia (CCA), clinical data for most anesthetics are conflicting or non-existent. In addition, the effects of patient characteristics and mode of ventilation on anesthetic uptake are unclear. Forty-one ASA physical status I or II adult patients undergoing a variety of 1-1.5 h surgical procedures were randomly allocated to receive CCA with desflurane or isoflurane with ventilation being either spontaneous or controlled. An end-expired anesthetic concentration of 1.3 minimum alveolar anesthetic concentration (MAC) was maintained by continuous injection of the liquid anesthetic into the circuit using a syringe pump. After an initial 4-min wash-in period, uptake during the first hour of CCA was nearly constant. Uptake was the same whether ventilation was spontaneous or controlled. Patient characteristics (age, height, weight, weight3/4, and body surface area) were comparable between groups and did not correlate with uptake. The virtually constant uptake after wash-in of desflurane and isoflurane contrasts with the square root of time model of Lowe and Ernst. These findings may greatly simplify CCA.
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