Anesthesiology
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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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Comparative Study
Simultaneous intraoperative measurement of cardiac output by thermodilution and transtracheal Doppler.
Intraoperative measurement of cardiac output with transtracheal Doppler (DOP) was compared with that measured by thermodilution (TD). Cardiac output was measured simultaneously with both methods in 17 adult patients. For 86 pairs of measurements, the average difference between the two techniques was -0.21.min-1. ⋯ In conclusion, the transtracheal DOP technique did not reproduce the measurement of cardiac output by TD intraoperatively. Transtracheal DOP did not accurately trend changes in the TD measurement. These findings were obtained from patients with cardiovascular disease, and the conclusions may depend in part on the patient population and the investigators' experience with the transtracheal DOP technique.
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Cardiac morbidity and mortality after coronary artery bypass graft (CABG) surgery continue to be significant problems. To determine the prevalence, characteristics, and prognostic importance of postoperative myocardial ischemia after CABG surgery, the authors monitored 50 patients continuously for 10 perioperative days with the use of two-lead electrocardiography (ECG). ECG changes consistent with ischemia were defined as a reversible ST depression of 1 mm or greater or an elevation of 2 mm or greater from baseline, lasting at least 1 min. ⋯ Five adverse cardiac outcomes occurred on the day of surgery; all five were preceded by postoperative ischemia, three by intraoperative ischemia before bypass, and none by preoperative ischemia. Patients with late postoperative ischemia did not have an adverse cardiac outcome. The authors conclude the following: 1) ischemia is more prevalent postoperatively than preoperatively or intraoperatively before bypass; 2) the incidence of postoperative ischemia peaks shortly after revascularization, during which time it is symptomatically silent, difficult to detect, and related to adverse cardiac outcome; 3) late postoperative ischemia also is silent, but it is less prevalent and not associated with in-hospital adverse cardiac outcome; and 4) a relationship between ischemia and persistently elevated postoperative heart rate may exist and warrants additional investigation.