Anesthesia and analgesia
-
Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 1986
Spontaneous recovery of neuromuscular function after atracurium in pediatric patients.
Spontaneous recovery of neuromuscular function after a bolus dose of 0.40 mg/kg atracurium was assessed in 60 newborn to adolescent patients during balanced anesthesia. Each patient was allowed to recover spontaneously until complete recovery of the single twitch (T1) response and the train-of-four ratio measured from the hypothenar muscle evoked compound EMG. ⋯ The rate of recovery, calculated as the recovery index (time between 25% recovery and 75% recovery of T1) was significantly longer in patients under 2 months of age than in older infants or children and adolescents. Atracurium remains, nevertheless, a relaxant of intermediate duration of action even in small infants.
-
Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 1986
Epidural morphine improves pain relief and maintains sensory analgesia during continuous epidural bupivacaine after abdominal surgery.
Twenty patients scheduled for elective major abdominal surgery were matched into two groups with regard to age, sex, height, body weight, and surgical procedure. Both groups received general anesthesia plus lumbar epidural analgesia with similar loading doses of bupivacaine 0.5% (23.1 +/- 1.0 and 23.3 +/- 0.8 ml) (mean +/- SEM) followed by continuous infusion of plain bupivacaine 0.5% (8 ml/hr) plus, in one group, epidural morphine (0.5 mg/hr). Pain score on a 5-point scale and sensory analgesia (pin prick) were assessed hourly for 16 hours after skin incision. ⋯ Thus, within 10 hr after skin incision, seven patients in this group were discharged from the study, and 16 hr after incision only one patient maintained initial level of sensory analgesia. In contrast, each patient receiving bupivacaine plus morphine had stable sensory analgesia and was completely free of pain as indicated by a mean pain score of zero during the 16-hr observation period. Thus epidural morphine may improve pain relief and maintain analgesia during continuous epidural bupivacaine administration after abdominal surgery.
-
Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 1986
Continuous noninvasive monitoring of cardiac output with esophageal Doppler ultrasound during cardiac surgery.
Esophageal Doppler ultrasonography offers a continuous and noninvasive alternative to standard thermodilution cardiac output monitoring. A total of 372 simultaneous measurements of Doppler and thermodilution cardiac output were compared in 16 patients undergoing cardiac surgery. In addition, echocardiographic aortic diameter measurement, necessary for Doppler calibration, was compared with direct surgical measurement in 23 patients. ⋯ On the other hand, Doppler cardiac output was determined easily and accurately tracked thermodilution cardiac output (R2 = 0.95, common slope coefficient 1.050, by multiple linear regression). Furthermore, Doppler cardiac output was more reproducible, showing less short-term variability than thermodilution cardiac output. The esophageal Doppler technique allows cardiac output monitoring in patients for whom invasive monitoring is not warranted.