Anaesthesia and intensive care
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There is little information about analgesia use or pain experienced in children after neurosurgery. The aims of this study were to assess the degree of pain experienced by children after neurosurgery and the analgesic regimens used, and to identify factors associated with significant pain. Data for 52 children who underwent craniotomy were collected contemporaneously over 72 hours. ⋯ Using multivariate regression, duration of procedure was the only factor associated with parenteral morphine use for > 24 hours, and older age was the only factor associated with having an episode of pain scoring > 3. No episodes of significant respiratory depression were noted. At our institution, children receive multimodal analgesia after neurosurgery, commonly parenteral morphine, and this is usually associated with low pain scores.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Jan 2011
Intensive care medicine trainees' perception of professionalism: a qualitative study.
The Competency-Based Training program in Intensive Care Medicine in Europe identified 12 competency domains. Professionalism was given a prominence equal to technical ability. However, little information pertaining to fellows' views on professionalism is available. ⋯ Professionalism is mainly learned 'on the job' from role models in the intensive care unit. Formal teaching courses and sessions addressing professionalism aspects were nevertheless valued, and learning from own and others' mistakes was considered especially useful. Self-reflection as a starting point for learning professionalism was stressed.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Jan 2011
Speeding dantrolene preparation for treating malignant hyperthermia.
Dantrolene is known to have a low solubility in water Studies have demonstrated that it dissolves more rapidly in warm water However, the overall benefit of warming has not been measured. This study evaluated the overall time benefit of warming. The first step was to measure how long it took to warm the 10 ml plastic ampoules of sterile water from ambient temperature (20 degrees C) to 45 degrees C. ⋯ Thus the time difference in preparation was about 256 seconds, which is the time that could be saved in preparing the standard dose of 10 vials of dantrolene using water at 45 degrees C. However, as it required about seven minutes to initially warm the sterile ampoules, there would be a net increase, not decrease in the time required. These findings indicate that warming is of no benefit in speeding dantrolene preparation.
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Anaesth Intensive Care · Jan 2011
Biography Historical ArticlePituri and other Aboriginal medicines for pain relief.