Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Tranexamic acid administration after cardiac surgery: a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study.
Many different doses and administration schemes have been proposed for the use of the antifibrinolytic drug tranexamic acid during cardiac surgery. This study evaluated the effects of the treatment using tranexamic acid during the intraoperative period only and compared the results with the effects of the treatment continued into the postoperative period. ⋯ Prolongation of treatment with tranexamic acid after cardiac surgery is not advantageous with respect to intraoperative administration alone in reducing bleeding and number of allogeneic transfusions. Although the prevalence of postoperative complications was similar among groups, there is an increased risk of procoagulant response because of antifibrinolytic treatment. Therefore, the use of tranexamic acid during the postoperative period should be limited to patients with excessive bleeding as a result of primary fibrinolysis.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Effects of probenecid on renal function in surgical patients anesthetized with low-flow sevoflurane.
Dehydrofluorination of sevoflurane by carbon dioxide absorbents in anesthesia machines produces compound A, which is nephrotoxic in rats. Several clinical studies indicate that prolonged low-flow sevoflurane anesthesia is associated with an increased urinary excretion of biochemical markers, such as protein. Probenecid, a competitive inhibitor of organic anion transport, diminishes compound A nephrotoxicity in rats. The purpose of the present study was to examine the effects of low- and high-flow sevoflurane anesthesia on urinary excretion of biochemical markers in humans and to examine the effects of probenecid on urinary excretion of these markers. ⋯ Low-flow sevoflurane, which produces a sevenfold higher compound A exposure than high-flow sevoflurane, resulted in significant increases of several biochemical markers in half of the patients. Probenecid appears to provide protection against these renal effects.
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The value of exercise electrocardiography in the prediction of perioperative cardiac risk has yet to be defined. This study was performed to determine the predictive value of exercise electrocardiography as compared with clinical parameters and resting electrocardiography. ⋯ This prospective study shows that a ST-segment depression of 0.1 mV or more in the exercise electrocardiogram is an independent predictor of perioperative cardiac complications.
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The heat--capsaicin sensitization model was developed as a noninvasive and noninjurious human experimental pain model. The sequential application of moderate intensity thermal and topical chemical stimuli produces stable and long-lasting areas of cutaneous secondary hyperalgesia. The aim of the present study was to validate the heat--capsaicin sensitization model as a tool for testing analgesic drug efficacy. Responsivity of model-associated measures was tested with remifentanil, a potent and ultrashort acting mu-opioid agonist. ⋯ Using the heat-capsaicin sensitization model, opioid analgesia and suppression of secondary hyperalgesia was reliably demonstrated without skin injury.
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The "sniffing position" is widely considered essential to the performance of orotracheal intubation and has become the cornerstone of training in anesthesiology. However, the anatomic superiority of this patient head position has not been established. ⋯ The sniffing position does not achieve alignment of the three important axes (MA, PA, and LA) in awake patients with normal airway anatomy.