Anesthesia and analgesia
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Halothane or isoflurane was used to induce anesthesia in children scheduled for outpatient surgical procedures. Both agents were administered at predetermined rates until comparable concentrations in end-expired air were reached. Induction of anesthesia, as well as the time taken before tracheal intubation was possible, was protracted in patients given isoflurane. In the recovery period, the times taken to respond to pharyngeal suction, to tracheal extubation, and to the first cry were similar for both anesthetic agents.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Feb 1986
Comparative StudyA comparison of the effects of alfentanil applied to the spinal cord and intravenous alfentanil on noxiously evoked activity of dorsal horn neurons in the cat spinal cord.
The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of alfentanil applied to the surface of the spinal cord and the effects of intravenously administered alfentanil on noxiously evoked activity of dorsal horn neurons. Extracellular single neuron recordings were obtained from wide dynamic range neurons in 26 decerebrate cats with transected spinal cords. Spinally administered alfentanil, 25 micrograms or 50 micrograms, caused 36 and 86% suppression of noxiously evoked activity, respectively. ⋯ Intravenously administered alfentanil, 12.5 micrograms/kg or 25 micrograms/kg, produced suppression of 43 and 89%, respectively, with maximum mean suppression observed at the 6- and 3-min time points, respectively. Complete recovery after intravenous administration was seen within 30 min. This study, using a sensitive neurophysiologic assay, demonstrates the important differences in onset and duration of drug effects that must be considered when comparing the responses of spinal cord neurons to intravenously administered narcotics and narcotics applied directly to the surface of the spinal cord.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Feb 1986
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEpidural morphine provides postoperative pain relief in peripheral vascular and orthopedic surgical patients: a dose-response study.
A randomized double-blind study compared the dose-response relationship of epidural morphine for postoperative pain relief in two groups of patients whose surgical procedures would result in either moderate (femoral-popliteal bypass) or severe (total knee replacement) postoperative pain. Preservative-free morphine sulphate in doses of 0, 2, 5, or 10 mg in a volume of 10 ml saline were administered via lumbar epidural catheters. The epidural morphine was administered 1 hr after the last dose of intraoperative local epidural anesthetic in an effort to achieve a pain-free postoperative course. ⋯ Further enhancement of analgesia occurred with 10 mg; however, late respiratory depression, demonstrated by an increased resting PaCO2 10 hr after administration, was seen only with the 10-mg dose in both surgical groups. Minor complications such as nausea, vomiting, pruritus, and urinary retention were uncommon and did not appear to be related to dose. We found that 5 mg epidural morphine provided long-lasting postoperative analgesia without serious adverse effects after peripheral vascular and orthopedic surgery.