Anesthesiology
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Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Intrathecal injection of morphine for obstetric analgesia.
Intrathecal injection of morphine was used to provide obstetric analgesia in 20 primiparous women in labor. When the cervix was at least 3 cm dilated, morphine, 1 or 2 mg, was injected intrathecally. In all parturients, labor pains were completely relieved after 15-60 min and analgesia lasted as long as eight to 11 hours. ⋯ However, supraspinal effects of morphine cannot be excluded. The low lipid solubility of morphine can explain its slow onset and prolonged duration of action. Also, this will result in minimal systemic absorption of morphine, which protects the fetus and results in selective maternal analgesia.
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A chronic model for investigation of spinal anesthesia in the dog is described. This model incorporates the use of a chronically implanted catheter in the lumbar subarachnoid space. An 18-gauge thin-walled Crawford needle is passes percutaneously into the subarachnoid space. ⋯ Durations of motor blockade were longest for dibucaine and tetracaine, followed in order of decreasing duration by bupivacaine, lidocaine, chloroprocaine, and mepivacaine. The durations of subarachnoid conduction motor blockades in the dog are qualitatively similar to reported values for spinal anesthesia in man. Therefore, the technique described may provide a useful model to evaluate factors that may influence spinal anesthesia.