European journal of anaesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Preferential channelling of anaesthetic solution injected within the perivascular axillary sheath.
Preferential channelling of anaesthetic solution injected into the perivascular axillary sheath was investigated in 40 patients undergoing elective orthopaedic upper-limb surgery. Three needles, with different approaches and inclinations, were inserted near the three main terminal branches of the brachial plexus using an axillary approach. ⋯ Back flow was observed, mainly in the needle nearest to the radial nerve during injection of the anaesthetic solution in the superior and inferior aspects of the brachial artery, and in the needle close to the ulnar nerve when the injection was performed posterior to the artery, near the radial nerve. These results could be related to the trapping of anaesthetic solution in unconnected compartments and to the slope of the needle injecting the anaesthetic solution which spreads preferentially along a gradient following the needle shaft direction.
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We describe the experience of the acute pain service of the University Hospital of Galicia, Spain since its inception. We have treated 1214 patients using either patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with morphine (72%), or patient-controlled epidural analgesia with fentanyl + bupivacaine (22%). ⋯ Three (0.33%) patients using PCA had respiratory depression treated with naloxone; no patient with patient-controlled epidural analgesia had respiratory depression. In our experience the creation of an acute pain service and the associated development of pain-treatment protocols and the training of hospital personnel produced excellent results.
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Case Reports Comparative Study
A patient's experience of a new post-operative patient-controlled analgesic technique.
A patient underwent major spinal surgery, twice within a 3 week period. On the first occasion his post-operative pain was managed by conventional morphine patient-controlled analgesia (PCA). ⋯ The results showed comparable quality of analgesia and sedation and similar effects on respiration. However, the patient expressed a preference for morphine PCA.
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Case Reports Comparative Study
Anaesthesia for electroconvulsive therapy: use of propofol revisited.
In three clinically depressed patients undergoing repeated electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) with either propofol or methohexitone, dose-dependent decreases in the duration of motor and EEG seizure activity were noted. Use of a 'minimally' hypnotic dose of propofol (0.75-1.0 mg kg-1) was associated with a seizure duration which was comparable to standard hypnotic doses of methohexitone. We conclude that doses of propofol < 1.5 mg kg-1 are associated with a clinically acceptable duration of EEG seizure activity (> 30 s) during ECT.