Anesthesiology
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Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial
Intrathecal methadone and morphine for postoperative analgesia: a comparison of the efficacy, duration, and side effects.
A double-blind study of patients selected at random compared the analgesic and adverse effects of intrathecal methadone (1 mg) with those of intrathecal morphine (0.5 and 1 mg). The study was conducted on 30 patients who underwent major orthopedic or urologic surgery. The intrathecal opioid was administered at the end of surgery, and assessments began 1 h thereafter and continued for 20 h. ⋯ Nausea and vomiting were common to all groups. Intrathecal morphine (0.5 and 1 mg) provides superior postoperative analgesia to 1 mg methadone. Various explanations for the observed differences between the drugs are discussed, including the possibility that the dose of methadone used in the subarachnoid space was inadequate and that a larger dose might have produced an effect equal to that of morphine.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Needle bevel direction and headache after inadvertent dural puncture.
To study the effect of needle bevel direction on the incidence and severity of headache following inadvertent dural puncture occurring during the identification of the epidural space, the authors randomly assigned obstetric anesthesia residents to identify epidural space with the bevel of the epidural needle oriented either parallel or perpendicular to the longitudinal dural fibers. If dural puncture occurred, an observer unaware of the needle bevel direction, daily assessed the presence and severity of any subsequent headache. ⋯ Similarly, we administered a therapeutic blood patch to ten of 20 women in the perpendicular group but to only four of 21 in the parallel group (P less than 0.05). Thus, identifying the epidural space with the needle bevel oriented parallel to the longitudinal dural fibers limits the size of the subsequent dural tear and, therefore, lowers the incidence of headache should dural perforation occur.
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Certain opioids release histamine from cutaneous mast cells to produce local wheal and flare responses and adverse hemodynamic effects. In vivo responses to opioids suggest that cutaneous responses result from the interaction of opioids with opioid receptors on human mast cells. There are no data evaluating or comparing the opioids currently used in anesthesia. ⋯ Electron micrographs of biopsies from fentanyl-induced wheals demonstrated normal mast cell architecture with no evidence of mast cell degranulation. Opioid effects on wheal and flare responses and mast cell degranulation appear independent of opioid analgesic potency. Opioids produce cutaneous vascular responses dependent on both histamine release from mast cells and direct effects on the vasculature.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Recovery from inhalation anesthesia is often marked by the occurrence of postoperative tremor that resembles shivering, which is known to be associated with an increase in oxygen uptake (VO2), CO2 output (VCO2), and minute ventilation (VE). This study determined the time course of the ventilatory changes observed during the first hour of recovery from isoflurane anesthesia. Ten patients (ASA PS 1) scheduled for minor orthopedic surgery (knee arthroscopy) were included in this study. ⋯ Postoperative tremor was observed in all patients within 7.1 +/- 1.2 min (mean +/- SEM) after isoflurane discontinuation and was associated with a marked increase in the following: VO2, from 173 +/- 26 ml/min at the end of anesthesia to 457 +/- 88 ml/min; VCO2, from 149 +/- 18 ml/min at the end of anesthesia to 573 +/- 98 ml/min; and VE, from 6.8 +/- 0.7 l/min at the end of anesthesia to 16.6 +/- 2.8 l/min (values obtained 20 min after isoflurane discontinuation). In three patients during intense shivering, VO2, VCO2, and VE reached peak values higher than 800 ml/min, 1,300 ml/min and 30 l/min, respectively. This study shows that postoperative tremor following isoflurane anesthesia may be associated with prolonged and large increases in oxygen uptake, CO2 output, and minute ventilation.
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Comparative Study
Intrathecal midazolam and fentanyl in the rat: evidence for different spinal antinociceptive effects.
The effects of intrathecal midazolam and fentanyl on electrical current threshold for pain were measured using stimulating electrodes in the neck and tail of rats with chronically implanted lumbar subarachnoid catheters. This involved the measurement of the minimum current (50 Hz 2 ms pulses 0-5 mA), which made the rat squeak when applied alternately to electrodes at each skin site. The responses measured in milliamperes were expressed as a number of times control readings. ⋯ Tail withdrawal in response to non-noxious stimulation was preserved in all animals with spinal analgesia, indicating that myelinated afferent and efferent pathways were still functioning. Righting reflex, coordination, motor power, and alertness were also preserved in the presence of both drugs. Both drugs caused spinally mediated antinociceptive effects that were qualitatively different.