Anesthesiology
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The purpose of this study was to compare the efficacy of standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation and cardiopulmonary resuscitation with interposed abdominal compression for restoration of spontaneous circulation in an asphyxial and fibrillatory arrest model. Twenty-eight pigs weighing 19-27 kg were randomly allocated to two arrest groups. Each of these two groups was then subdivided into a treatment group and a control group resulting in four groups of seven pigs each. ⋯ End-diastolic arteriovenous pressure difference, which correlates with coronary blood flow, was significantly higher with interposed abdominal compression during resuscitation from both forms of cardiac arrest. The results of our study indicate that cardiopulmonary resuscitation with interposed abdominal compression in the second half of the relaxation phase improves diastolic arteriovenous pressure difference and resuscitation success in comparison with that following standard cardiopulmonary resuscitation. The use of interposed abdominal compression during basic cardiac life support should be investigated further in patients.
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To assess the hemodynamic properties of the new inhalational anesthetic sevoflurane, 22 dogs were chronically instrumented for measurement of heart rate, aortic, left ventricular and left atrial pressures, cardiac output, and coronary blood flow. Dogs were randomly assigned to two groups, receiving either 1.2 and 2 MAC of sevoflurane (n = 11) or isoflurane (n = 11). At 1.2 and 2 MAC, sevoflurane produced an increase in heart rate (+60 +/- 12% and +54 +/- 9%, respectively), dose-dependent aortic hypotension (-22 +/- 4% and -38 +/- 4%, respectively), systemic vasodilation (-22 +/- 5% and -19 +/- 5%, respectively), dose-dependent decrease in stroke volume (-31 +/- 6% and -48 +/- 4%, respectively), and left ventricular dP/dt (-40 +/- 4% and -61 +/- 10%, respectively). ⋯ Except for heart rate, sevoflurane and isoflurane produced similar effects. At 1.2 MAC, sevoflurane produced a greater increase in heart rate than isoflurane (+60 +/- 12% vs. +33 +/- 9%). The authors conclude that, except for heart rate, the effects of sevoflurane on cardiac function and coronary blood flow are almost identical to those induced by isoflurane in the chronically instrumented dog.
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Oliguria is common in critically ill patients and may result from prerenal, renal, and postrenal causes. Oliguria also frequently develops in patients with normal concentrations of blood urea nitrogen and creatinine. Most of these patients do not develop renal failure. ⋯ The hypovolemic patients increased their urine output from 17 +/- 2 ml/h to greater than 0.5 ml.kg-1.h-1 following a 500-ml bolus of normal saline. The normovolemic oliguric patients remained oliguric following the saline bolus (13 +/- 2 to 19 +/- 3 ml/h). The authors conclude that oliguria is common in critically ill patients and results from renal hypoperfusion and ADH excess.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)