Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2011
Comparative StudyResponses to dural puncture during institution of combined spinal-epidural analgesia: a comparison of 27 gauge pencil-point and 27 gauge cutting-edge needles.
Pencil-point spinal needles are popular for combined spinal-epidural analgesia because they cause less dural puncture headache than cutting-edge spinal needles. However many parturients move, grimace, vocalise or experience paraesthesia or dysaesthesia during dural puncture when performing 'needle through needle' combined spinal-epidural analgesia. We compared dural puncture responses induced by pencil-point and cutting-edge needles (both 27 gauge). ⋯ Pooled data analysis revealed that pencil-point and cutting-edge needles induced grimacing and movement in 17 (22%) and 2 (5%), spontaneous vocalisation in 4 (5%) and 1 (3%) and was perceived by 13 (17%) and 3 (8%) parturients (P < 0.025, P=NS, P=NS), respectively. Overall, 34 and 6 objective and subjective patient responses (P < 0.005) occurred when inserting these needles, respectively. Dural puncture by a 27 gauge pencil-point needle inserted 'needle through needle' when instituting combined spinal-epidural analgesia induces more iatrogenic responses than a 27 gauge cutting-edge needle.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2011
Preferences of critical care registrars in fluid resuscitation of major trauma patients: concordance with current guidelines.
Fluid resuscitation of patients with major trauma remains a controversial topic. We hypothesised that current practice amongst critical care registrars at our centre might differ from current clinical guidelines. Sixty-six registrars from anaesthesia, intensive care and emergency medicine completed a survey giving their preferences for fluid resuscitation in major trauma patients. ⋯ In addition, participants would transfuse an older patient (P=0.02) or an actively bleeding patient (P < 0.01) earlier than the younger or not visibly bleeding trauma patient. We concluded that our study demonstrated general consistency with current clinical guidelines but with interesting interdepartmental variations. We suggest that this type of study could enhance clinical practice by pointing to targeted additional learning opportunities.
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Melatonin is a substance chiefly produced by the pineal gland and has a key role in the sleep-wake cycle. It also has an important antioxidant role. Exogenous melatonin has a short half-life and is available in a range of preparations. ⋯ The antioxidant properties of melatonin are being investigated for use in sepsis and reperfusion injuries. It would appear that patients on melatonin supplements should continue taking them perioperatively because there may be benefits. Melatonin and its analogues will be increasingly encountered in the perioperative setting.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2011
Scientific publications in international anaesthesiology journals: a 10-year survey.
Significant growth has been seen in the field of anaesthesiology in recent decades. The current geographic distribution of the publications on anaesthesia research may be different from ten years ago. We performed this literature survey to examine the national origin of articles published in international anaesthesiology journals and to evaluate their contribution to anaesthesia research. ⋯ Denmark, Switzerland and Finland had the largest number of articles per capita. Anesthesia & Analgesia published the most number of articles from 2000 to 2009, followed by Anesthesiology, Pain and the British Journal of Anaesthesia. The numbers of clinical studies and randomised controlled trials decreased markedly from 2000 to 2009.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Mar 2011
Comparative StudyEmpirical aspects of linking intensive care registry data to hospital discharge data without the use of direct patient identifiers.
In the field of intensive care, clinical data registries are commonly used to support clinical audit and develop evidence-based practice. However, they are often restricted to the intensive care unit episode only, limiting their ability to follow long-term patient outcomes and identify patient readmissions. Data linkage can be used to supplement existing data, but a lack of unique patient identifiers may compromise the accuracy of the linkage process. ⋯ Factors most strongly associated with not being a correct link in the first method included patients at one study hospital, admissions in 2002 and 2003 and having a hospital length of stay of 20 days or more. Linking the Australia/New Zealand critical care without direct patient identifiers is a valid linkage method that will enable the measurement of long-term patient survival and readmissions. While some sources of bias have been identified, this method provides sufficient quality linkage that will support broad analyses designed to signal future in-depth research.