Journal of clinical anesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
A controlled trial of esmolol for the induction of deliberate hypotension.
Twenty-five patients scheduled for lumbar fusion or cerebrovascular surgery were enrolled in an open label treatment controlled study comparing blood pressure and heart rate responses during deliberate hypotension with either esmolol or nitroprusside during steady-state N2O/isoflurane anesthesia. The first 5 patients were empirically assigned to the esmolol group; the remaining 20 patients were randomized to receive either esmolol or nitroprusside. The target of 15% reduction in mean arterial pressure (MAP) from baseline determined during anesthesia was attained with esmolol 195 +/- 10 micrograms/kg/min (mean +/- SEM) for the group (n = 15) or nitroprusside 1.9 +/- 0.3 micrograms/kg/min for the nitroprusside group (n = 10). ⋯ No patient in either group suffered any adverse reaction to hypotension. It is concluded that in moderate doses esmolol is a safe and effective hypotensive agent during isoflurane anesthesia, with no reflex tachycardia and no significant potential for rebound hypertension. A MAP reduction of 30% from preanesthesia baseline was readily obtained with this combination.
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Clonidine and other clinically available alpha-2 adrenergic agonists reduce inhalational and narcotic anesthetic requirements while providing hemodynamic stability during stressful periods of surgery. Like the opiates, the alpha-2 adrenergic agonists are potent analgesics when given systemically, epidurally, or intrathecally. Their effects are reversed by alpha2 adrenergic antagonists. ⋯ They have anxiolytic properties and therefore can be potentially useful in the preanesthetic period. This drug class has the potential to provide many of the component effects required for perioperative care. For these reasons, the alpha2 adrenergic class of drugs should be important in the future of anesthesia.
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The utility of integrated pulse and pulmonary artery oximetry, known as dual oximetry, was evaluated by monitoring 10 critically ill surgical patients for a total of 208 patient hours. The ventilation-perfusion index (VQI), an estimate of venous admixture, and the oxygen extraction index (O2EI), an estimate of tissue oxygen utilization coefficient, previously described, were calculated on-line from arterial and mixed venous oxyhemoglobin saturations using a computer. Effective monitoring was accomplished 85% of the total time. ⋯ Dual oximetry appears to be a technically reliable and accurate method of monitoring pulmonary gas exchange and tissue oxygen utilization. The equipment provided stable readings for at least six hours without recalibration. Random variability is sufficiently small to allow early detection of alterations in pulmonary and circulatory function without blood sampling.
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Airway obstruction during the induction of general anesthesia remains a persistent problem in modern anesthesia practice, particularly in obstetric patients. Generally, a careful preoperative airway evaluation uncovers most abnormalities that might make intubation difficult. ⋯ Although every anesthesia provider is trained to manage such acute airway problems, the provision of a patent airway is not always possible, particularly when repeated attempts at endoscopic or blind intubation have failed, leaving a bloody field that prevents optimal visualization, or when time does not allow to wake up the patient. In this article a difficult airway problem is reported in which translaryngeal guided intubation was lifesaving.