Annales françaises d'anesthèsie et de rèanimation
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The technique described by Winnie in 1973 is supposed to provide a regional block of the femoral, femoral cutaneous, and obturator nerves by a single injection within the femoral nerve sheath. This study aimed to assess the diffusion spaces for the local anaesthetic solution used in this technique. The anatomical study included the dissection of 2 adult and 1 foetal cadavers. ⋯ The other type was an external diffusion, in front of the iliacus muscle, the liquid never reaching the internal side of the psoas major muscle, and therefore the obturator nerve. The "3 in 1" block would therefore seem to be useful for those surgical acts requiring only a block of the femoral and femoral cutaneous nerves, i.e. those involving the anterior aspect of the thigh and knee, the femoral shaft, and the patella. On the other hand, its usefulness for surgery of the hip (dislocation, fractured neck of femur) is rather uncertain.
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Halothane was administered to 10 ASA or 11 patients undergoing elective peripheral surgery. The vaporizer was included in the delivery gas line of the semiclosed system. Löwe's square root of time model of uptake was used to calculate the required doses of halothane. ⋯ The latter was well above the theoretical values during the first 9 min of anaesthesia (0.85% at the 4 th min). This concentration then decreased progressively, becoming less than the expected value after 15 min (0.4% at the 30 th min). Löwe's model would therefore seem to lead to a gross overestimation of the amount of anaesthetic vapour to be delivered to a patient at the beginning of anaesthesia, and an underestimation thereafter.