Anaesthesia and intensive care
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Sep 2012
Anaphylaxis to muscle relaxants: an audit of ten years of allergy testing at the Royal Adelaide Hospital.
We audited patients with anaphylaxis to muscle relaxants during anaesthesia referred to the Department of Anaesthesia at the Royal Adelaide Hospital between the start of 2000 and the end of 2009. Of the 220 patients tested during this period, 43 had a positive intradermal test to the muscle relaxant given during their anaesthetic. The majority of these were to rocuronium and suxamethonium. Where rocuronium was the index agent, 65% of patients cross-reacted with another relaxant and 29% of patients with suxamethonium as their index agent demonstrated cross-reaction with another relaxant.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Sep 2012
Influence of major cardiopulmonary surgery on serum levels of procalcitonin and other inflammatory markers.
Procalcitonin is a marker of significant bacterial infection. With Food and Drug Administration approval of a new high-sensitive procalcitonin assay in the United States, we felt it would be important to assess its normal elevation and time characteristics, as compared to other inflammatory markers in patients undergoing routine cardiac surgery. This is a prospective observational study including consecutive patients after routine cardiac surgery. ⋯ In addition, mean and peak procalcitonin levels were significantly higher (P=0.004 and P=0.002 respectively) in the 60 patients with a complicated course. This study provides insights into 'normal' kinetics of a new high-sensitive procalcitonin assay after different types of cardiac surgery, and in patients with and without a complicated postoperative course. Our results suggest that using a single procalcitonin level to guide antibiotic therapy decisions during the early period after major cardiac surgery may not be useful and that monitoring its kinetic may be the preferred strategy.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Sep 2012
Association between perioperative glucose levels and adverse outcomes in infants receiving open-heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass for congenital heart disease.
There is no consensus that hyperglycaemia is an independent predictor of morbidity-mortality in children. This retrospective observational study aimed to assess the association between abnormal perioperative glucose levels and adverse outcomes in infants receiving open-heart surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass. The records of a total of 233 infants who underwent cardiopulmonary bypass for a variety of congenital cardiac procedures between January and December 2010 were reviewed. ⋯ After adjusting for other potential variables, lower weight at surgery, longer surgery time and hospital length-of-stay are the independent predictors of morbidity-mortality. Our findings suggest that perioperative hyperglycaemia and mild transient hypoglycaemia do not appear to be detrimental to infants with congenital heart disease, although we did not assess neurological outcomes. Nevertheless, due to the limitations of the retrospective design of this study and its limited power, more thorough clinical randomised controlled trials are needed.