Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Tracheal extubation in children: halothane versus isoflurane, anesthetized versus awake.
The authors compared the incidence of respiratory complications and arterial hemoglobin desaturation during emergence from anesthesia in children whose tracheas were extubated while they were anesthetized or after they were awake and to whom halothane or isoflurane had been administered. One hundred children 1-4 yr of age undergoing minor urologic surgery were studied. After a standard induction technique, patients were randomized to receive either isoflurane or halothane. ⋯ When tracheal extubation occurred in deeply anesthetized patients, no differences were found between the two volatile agents. When tracheal extubation of awake patients was performed, the use of isoflurane was associated with more episodes of coughing and airway obstruction than was halothane (P less than 0.05). Awake tracheal extubation following either agent was associated with significantly more episodes of hemoglobin desaturation than was tracheal extubation while anesthetized.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Systemic alpha-adrenergic blockade with phentolamine: a diagnostic test for sympathetically maintained pain.
The diagnosis of sympathetically maintained pain (SMP) is typically established by assessment of pain relief during local anesthetic blockade of the sympathetic ganglia that innervate the painful body part. To determine if systemic alpha-adrenergic blockade with phentolamine can be used to diagnose SMP, we compared the effects on pain of local anesthetic sympathetic ganglion blocks (LASB) and phentolamine blocks (PhB) in 20 patients with chronic pain and hyperalgesia that were suspected to be sympathetically maintained. The blocks were done in random order on separate days. ⋯ The pain relief achieved by LASB and PhB correlated closely (r = 0.84), and there was no significant difference in the maximum pain relief achieved with the two blocks (t = 0.19, P greater than 0.8). Nine patients experienced a greater than 50% relief of pain and hyperalgesia from both LASB and PhB and were considered to have a clinically significant component of SMP. We conclude that alpha-adrenergic blockade with intravenous phentolamine is a sensitive alternative test to identify patients with SMP.
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Comparative Study
The accuracy of Finapres noninvasive mean arterial pressure measurements in anesthetized patients.
The Finapres (FIN) is a new noninvasive blood pressure monitor that provides continuous arterial waveform display with the use of a finger cuff. The authors assessed the accuracy of FIN mean arterial pressure (MAP) measurements relative to simultaneous direct radial arterial pressures in 20 patients undergoing general anesthesia for major elective surgery. Data were collected digitally with the use of RS-232 communications over a total of 16.2 h. ⋯ However, 32.3 +/- 6.2% of all MAP comparisons differed by greater than +/- 10 mmHg, and 5.0 +/- 1.1% differed by greater than +/- 20 mmHg. Moreover, there was an average of one episode every 2 patient-hours when the FIN MAP differed by greater than +/- 20 mmHg for more than 1 min. Although the MAP measured by FIN accurately reflected direct MAPs most of the time, there were occasional discrepancies of different magnitude such that clinical usefulness may be limited in patients in whom continuous accurate blood pressure measurements are essential.
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To evaluate the possible interaction between clonidine and ephedrine, the authors studied hemodynamic responses to intravenous ephedrine in 80 patients who received either clonidine pre-anesthetic medication of approximately 5 micrograms.kg-1 orally (n = 40) or no medication (n = 40). The patients were studied while they were either awake (n = 40) or anesthetized with enflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen (n = 40). ⋯ The enhanced pressor responses to ephedrine observed in both awake and anesthetized patients in the presence of clonidine may be attributed to increased catecholamine storage at sympathetic nerve endings due to clonidine, enhanced sensitivity of tissue receptors to which ephedrine binds, potentiation of alpha-adrenoceptor mediated vasoconstriction of both agents, or all of these. It is concluded that oral clonidine preanesthetic medication of 5 micrograms.kg-1 does augment rather than attenuate the pressor responses to intravenous ephedrine in patients both prior to and during general anesthesia.
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Five healthy, nonpregnant volunteers were studied before and after induction of lumbar epidural anesthesia to determine the cause of central hypothermia during epidural anesthesia. Cutaneous heat loss was measured from 10 area-weighted sites using thermal flux transducers. Oxygen consumption was measured and converted to heat production in watts (W). ⋯ Analysis of the tremor patterns suggests that oscillations recorded during epidural anesthesia in nonpregnant individuals is normal thermoregulatory shivering. Shivering occurred sooner and was more intense during iced saline infusion than during epidural anesthesia, despite comparable central hypothermia. The low intensity of shivering during epidural anesthesia, and in some individuals the delay in onset, may result from blockade of afferent cutaneous cold signals.