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Comparative Study
Self-tuning adaptive control of induced hypotension in humans: a comparison of isoflurane and sodium nitroprusside.
- C Prys-Roberts and R K Millard.
- Sir Humphry Davy Department of Anaesthesia, University of Bristol, United Kingdom.
- J Clin Monit. 1990 Jul 1; 6 (3): 236-40.
AbstractInduced hypotension is commonly used during surgery to decrease arterial pressure. Sodium nitroprusside and isoflurane are well-known hypotensive agents. The use of self-tuning adaptive control of induced hypotension was assessed with the use of sodium nitroprusside and isoflurane as hypotensive agents. Nineteen surgical patients were studied during closed-loop control of hypotension induced with sodium nitroprusside. This group of patients was compared with 10 similar patients in whom infusions of sodium nitroprusside were controlled manually by an anesthesiologist. Although the results of the two studies varied, no conclusion could be drawn regarding the superiority of either manual or closed-loop control. When manual versus automatic control of isoflurane-induced hypotension was assessed in a similar fashion, the two methods of induction were found to be comparable.
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