Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Dec 2005
Case ReportsArterial oxygen desaturation during only one of two similar thoracoscopic procedures on the same patient.
The present report describes two similar thoracoscopic procedures performed on the same 81-year-old male patient. Because acute hypoxia had developed during one-lung ventilation on the first occasion, serial blood gases were taken during the second. Also, whereas on the first occasion the non-ventilated lung had been left open to air when one-lung ventilation was initiated, on the second it was connected to an ambient pressure oxygen source with the object of theoretically enabling apnoeic oxygenation during lung collapse. It is argued that this fundamental difference in anaesthetic practice may have contributed to the improved oxygenation that was recorded during the second thoracoscopy.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Dec 2005
Comparative StudyThe influence of the current medicolegal climate on New South Wales anaesthetic practice.
A survey was posted to all New South Wales and Provisional Fellows of the Australian and New Zealand College of Anaesthetists to assess the influence of the current medicolegal climate on their anaesthetic practice. Information collected included demographics, opinions regarding the current medico-legal climate, medical defence organizations, and the implications for anaesthetic practice. The response rate was 78% (640/820). ⋯ Changes to the conduct of the preoperative consultation were common. Other changes to practice included more thorough documentation of complications (50.8%) and a strong reluctance to perform neuraxial blocks (54%). This survey suggests that anaesthetists are concerned about the current medicolegal climate and as a result, some are retiring earlier and giving up high-risk areas of practice.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Dec 2005
Review Comparative StudyThe theoretical basis for using apnoeic oxygenation via the non-ventilated lung during one-lung ventilation to delay the onset of arterial hypoxaemia.
At the time one-lung ventilation is initiated, nitrogen from the atmosphere may enter the non-ventilated lung via a double-lumen tube connector that has been left open to air, even momentarily. Ongoing oxygen uptake from the non-ventilated lung raises the partial pressure of nitrogen. This should lead to activation of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction and a reduction in intra-pulmonary shunting. ⋯ In such cases, it may be advantageous to have excluded nitrogen from the non-ventilated lung by connecting it to an oxygen source at ambient pressure. Ongoing apnoeic oxygenation, while the airways are patent, and as the lung collapses, should delay the onset of arterial desaturation. In this paper we review the theoretical basis for apnoeic oxygenation during one-lung ventilation, and in particular on oxygen uptake by the non-ventilated lung prior to and during its subsequent collapse.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Dec 2005
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyComparison of forced-air warming and radiant heating during transurethral prostatic resection under spinal anaesthesia.
Forced-air warming is commonly used to warm patients intraoperatively, but may not achieve normothermia during a short procedure. Comparative trials of a new radiant warming device in general anaesthesia (Suntouch, Fisher and Paykel, Auckland, New Zealand) have had conflicting results. We conducted a randomized controlled trial to compare the efficacy and thermal comfort of the Suntouch radiant warmer and forced-air warming in patients at high risk of hypothermia during neuraxial blockade. ⋯ A large proportion of patients in both groups (46% and 33% respectively, P=0.3) were hypothermic (<36 degrees C) on arrival in the post-anaesthesia care unit. No other patient variables were significantly different. Neither warming device reliably prevented hypothermia, although forced-air warming was slightly superior.