Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthésie
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Major life-threatening complications following blood transfusion are rare and human error remains an important aetiological factor in many. The infectious risk from blood transfusion is predominantly hepatitis, and non-A, non-B and hepatitis C (HCV) are the most common subtypes noted. The risk of post-transfusion hepatitis (PTH) appears to be decreasing and this is attributed to both deferral of high-risk donors and more aggressive screening of donated blood. ⋯ Earlier recurrence of cancer and an increased incidence of postoperative infection have been associated with perioperative blood transfusion although the evidence is not persuasive. Microaggregate blood filters are not recommended for routine blood transfusion but do have a role in the prophylaxis of non-haemolytic febrile reactions caused by platelet and granulocyte debris in the donor blood. Patients should be advised when there is likely to be a requirement for perioperative blood transfusion and informed consent for transfusion should be obtained.
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It has been previously demonstrated that the output of calibrated vaporizers is influenced by the concentration of nitrous oxide in the carrier gas. This study was performed to determine whether helium in the carrier gas affects the output of modern calibrated vaporizers. A factorial design was used to determine the influence of carrier-gas helium concentration, carrier-gas flow rate and vaporizer dial setting on the output of four vaporizers: Ohio Calibrated Enflurane, Ohio Calibrated Isoflurane, Ohmeda Isotec 4, and Dräger Vapor 19.1 Isoflurane. ⋯ There was an effect of helium concentration on vaporizer output in all models. None of these changes was clinically important, since vaporizer output did not vary by more than +/- 10%, except at high flows and at high helium concentrations with the Ohmeda Isotec 4. It is concluded that these vaporizers can be used safely with helium.
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Review Case Reports
Epidural anaesthesia for caesarean section in an achondroplastic dwarf.
This report describes the anaesthetic management of an 18-yr-old achondroplastic dwarf who presented for elective Caesarean section. Epidural anaesthesia was performed without technical difficulty using 8 ml carbonated lidocaine 2% with epinephrine 1:200,000. ⋯ Previous reports have described technical difficulties in these patients, such as dural puncture and inability to advance the catheter into the epidural space, but no serious complications resulted and epidural anaesthesia was successful on subsequent attempts. The existing literature on the anaesthetic management of achondroplasia for Caesarean section is reviewed and considerations are presented concerning the choice of local anaesthetic, the epidural test dose, and dose titration.
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To record, tabulate and report problems associated with anaesthesia, we have developed an information collection system and computer software to follow all patients attended by an anaesthetist at a teaching hospital in Canada. For the last 15 mo, data for 17,000 patients have been collected and the system is ongoing. Data collection is from three sources: carbonless copies of the handwritten Operating Room (OR) and Post Anaesthetic Care Unit (PACU) records, other hospital databases, and postoperative visits. ⋯ Comparison of data entered into the computer programme to a retrospective chart review revealed discrepancies of less than 0.5%. Collection, verification and computer entry takes five minutes per patient and the on-going cost is estimated at $4 per patient record. Analysis of the information collected in this database has been useful for research of adverse outcome following anaesthesia, resident expertise profiles, and the administrative management of an anaesthesia department.