Anesthesia and analgesia
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialPostoperative voiding interval and duration of analgesia following peripheral or caudal nerve blocks in children.
We studied the time to postoperative micturition and the duration of analgesia in 82 children aged 6 mo to 10 yr undergoing herniorrhaphy or orchiopexy under general anesthesia with N2O and halothane. All received D5 lactate Ringer's solution equivalent to 6 h maintenance intraoperatively, and oral fluids postoperatively ad libitum. At the end of surgery, patients were randomly assigned to receive one of three regional anesthetic injections using 0.25% bupivacaine: caudal, 0.75 mL/kg (group I); caudal with 1:200,000 epinephrine, 0.75 mL/kg (group II); or ilioinguinaliliohypogastric nerve block with epinephrine through the wound by the surgeon (group III). ⋯ Seven patients who took more than 8 h to void required no intervention. There was no difference in the numbers without pain for > or = 4 h (74%, 64%, and 69% of groups I, II, and III), or those requiring analgesics by 24 h (66% overall). The time to postoperative voiding in children is variable and not prolonged by caudal analgesia; caudal bupivacaine with or without epinephrine and ilioinguinaliliohypogastric nerve block are equally effective for postoperative analgesia.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Jan 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialIntravenous isoproterenol as a marker for epidural test-dosing in children.
The purpose of this study was to determine if isoproterenol would be an effective marker of intravascular injection in anesthetized children. Forty-four ASA 1 children, aged 2 mo to 10 yr, were randomly assigned to two groups. Children in group 1 (n = 21) received 0.05 microgram/kg isoproterenol, and children in group 2 (n = 23) received 0.075 microgram/kg isoproterenol. ⋯ Isoproterenol, 0.075 microgram/kg, is more sensitive but still is an imperfect marker of an intravascular injection. It produces a heart rate increase in 96% of children anesthetized with halothane and nitrous oxide in 50% oxygen. The application of isoproterenol as an epidural test dose appears promising, but cannot be recommended until its full reliability and neurotoxicity are evaluated.