Journal of anesthesia
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We evaluated the incidence and severity of serum magnesium (Mg) abnormality along with other electrolyte and acid-base disturbances before and during the course of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) in pediatric patients. Serum Mg, Na, K, ionized Ca, pH, and blood gas measurements were performed before and hourly during the course of OLT. Hypomagnesemia was frequently observed in children undergoing OLT. ⋯ However, hypernatremia, hypokalemia, a decrease in ionized Ca, and metabolic acidosis were commonly observed during the course of OLT. We conclude that electrolyte abnormalities, including hypomagnesemia and metabolic acidosis, commonly develop in children during the course of OLT. The frequent assessment of electrolytes, pH and blood gases is essential for the correction of these abnormalities during the course of OLT.
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Journal of anesthesia · Mar 1994
Evaluation of twitch responses obtained from abductor hallucis muscle as a monitor of neuromuscular blockade: Comparison with the results from adductor pollicis muscle.
The twitch responses evoked from the abductor hallucis muscle (AHM) and the adductor pollicis muscle (APM) were examined simultaneously in 20 anesthetized patients following a single bolus intravenous administration of 0.04 mg·kg-1 of vecuronium bromide. The mean onset time of vecuronium-induced depression of AHM twitch responses was significantly slower than that of APM twitch responses (4.9±1.5 minvs 3.7±1.2 min, mean±SD,P<0.001), and when the clinical duration times of vecuronium were compared, AHM twitch responses recovered more quickly than APM twitch responses (15.3±4.1 minvs 19.6±6.7 min,P<0.01), although there was no statistically significant difference in the spontaneous recovery time between AHM and APM (9.8±2.9 minvs 10.0±3.6 min). It is concluded that the twitch responses of AHM may be a useful monitor of neuromuscular blockade in anesthetized patients in whom setting the blockade monitor on the patient's arms is difficult, although monitoring of twitch response of AHM is less sensitive than that of APM in case of vecuronium administration.
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Journal of anesthesia · Mar 1994
Does intraoperative analgesia modify the immune response in surgical patients?
The effect of epidural analgesia combined with inhalational anesthesia on the perioperative immune response was measured by using two-color analysis for the classification of functional lymphocyte subpopulations. Twenty-eight patients undergoing upper abdominal surgery were divided into four groups: group 1, isoflurane and with N2O group 2, sevoflurane with N2O; group 3, epidural analgesia plus isoflurane with N2O; and group 4, epidural analgesia and sevoflurane with N2O. Peripheral lymphocyte subpopulations were measured before, during, and after the operation by using anti-CD4 and anti-CD8 monoclonal antibodies. ⋯ Additionally, stress hormones such as epinephrine (EP), norepinephrine (NE), and cortisol (CO) were measured. EP was increased during and after the operation in groups 1 and 2, and after the operation in group 4, but the level was maintained throughout the study in group 3. In conclusion, prevention of noxious stimuli originating from operative fields by epidural block could prevent the increase in EP and the reduction of helper-inducer T cells in patients undergoing upper abdominal surgery.
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Journal of anesthesia · Mar 1994
Preoperative estimation of pulmonary extravascular thermal volume in patients undergoing pneumonectomy.
Pulmonary extravascular thermal volume (PETV) was measured during pulmonary artery occlusion in 18 patients preoperatively and 7 patients postoperatively who were undergoing pneumonectomy. We found that the PETV decreased from 6.6±2.3 ml·kg-1 before occlusion to 4.1±1.6 ml·kg-1 during occlusion. ⋯ There was a significant correlation between the PETV during occlusion and that at 3 weeks after pneumonectomy (r=0.66,P<0.05). In conclusion, PETV during pulmonary artery occlusion is a reliable baseline value in the assessment of postoperative pneumonectomy values.