Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthésie
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During the past decade, major advances have taken place with regard to intravenous infusion anaesthesia. New opioid analgesics, iv anaesthetics, and muscle relaxants have become available, which are characterized by a rapid onset of action, short duration of clinical effect, and favourable side effect profiles. Optimal administration of these drugs is often best achieved by continuous infusion, rather than a more traditional technique of intermittent bolus administration. ⋯ Pharmacokinetic principles guide rational selection of the iv anaesthetic drugs according to both procedure and patient-specific requirements. In addition, improvements in the new programmable syringe infusion pumps provide a degree of simplicity and accuracy in operation, which make iv infusion of one, two or three components of the anaesthetic state a simple and practical reality for most procedures. In this CME article, these issues will be reviewed according to the following outline: Historical considerations; Rationale for continuous infusion of iv anaesthetic drugs; Pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic considerations; Infusion schemes; New techniques, new indications; IV anaesthetic delivery systems; Pharmacoeconomic considerations; Conclusions.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Sugarless gum chewing before surgery does not increase gastric fluid volume or acidity.
Patients occasionally arrive in the operating suite chewing gum despite instructions to avoid oral intake for a specific number of hours before surgery. Some anaesthetists are hesitant to proceed with these patients fearing an increase in gastric volume and acidity. This study was undertaken to determine if gum chewing increased gastric volume and acidity. ⋯ There was no difference between groups in terms of gastric volume or pH. In addition, there was no relationship between gastric content and the length of time from gum discard to induction or the length of time gum was chewed. In conclusion, the data suggest that induction of anaesthesia is safe and surgery does not need to be delayed if a patient arrives in the OR chewing sugarless gum.
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The authors evaluated the accuracy of an intrathecal test dose (TD) to rule out unintentional subarachnoid injection in a prospective and double-blind study. Twenty-nine unmedicated patients scheduled to receive continuous spinal analgesia for their surgical procedures entered the study. After placement of non-invasive monitoring (ECG, BP and SpO2), an intrathecal catheter was placed in the lumbar area. ⋯ At four minutes SN reached 100% (CI 78-100%) for R and H, while only R obtained a SP of 93% (CI 66-100%). Using R as detector of intrathecal injection the -PV was 100% and the +PV 25% (assuming a 2% prevalence of unintentional spinal). We conclude that, with our test dose; (a) four minutes are needed to recognize signs of intrathecal injection; (b) leg-raising is a reliable sign; and (c) inquiring about other signs may only decrease the diagnostic accuracy of this test.
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Case Reports
Complications of continuous epidural infusions for postoperative analgesia in children.
To determine the incidences of side effects and complications associated with the use of epidural analgesia for infants and children at the Alberta Children's Hospital, we reviewed our experience over a two-year period. A database was established for recording management, side effects and complications of each epidural, and this is a retrospective review of that database. Problems were identified as complications if there was a need for medical intervention related to the patient complaint, and if the intervention was documented in the patient record. ⋯ Early discontinuation of the epidural occurred in 41 cases, technical problems with the epidural catheter being the commonest reason (21 cases). Although three potentially serious complications were identified (one catheter site infection, one seizure, one respiratory depression) none was associated with lasting consequences. The majority of complications associated with the use of epidurals were minor and easily remedied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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The purpose of this report is to describe a new complication of epidural blood patch for inadvertent dural puncture. A dural tap in an obstetric patient was managed initially with a prophylactic blood patch via the epidural catheter. Despite this, 48 hr later, she developed post-dural puncture headache, neck, and shoulder pain, and was given a second epidural blood patch. ⋯ There were no further sequelae. Although severe complications of epidural blood patch are rare, they are alarming. Exacerbation of the original symptoms of post-dural puncture headache caused by, or following, epidural blood patching has not previously been reported.