Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Dec 1983
Clinical effects of regional intravenous guanethidine (Ismelin) in reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
Twenty patients with documented reflex sympathetic dystrophy were treated with a series of regional intravenous guanethidine blocks. The mean delay between the first clinical symptoms and the start of guanethidine blocks was 3.6 months. The overall result was good in 11 patients, moderate in two patients and poor in seven patients. ⋯ Side effects, except pain after the injection, were few and of minor importance. The tolerance of the procedure may be improved by preceding the injection of guanethidine by an injection of a local anaesthetic agent. It may be concluded that with correct diagnosis and indication, guanethidine injections may play an important part in the treatment of reflex sympathetic dystrophy and may replace sympathetic blocks with local anaesthetics because of the longer duration of action and lower incidence of serious side-effects.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1983
Differential lung ventilation with unilateral PEEP following unilateral hydrochloric acid aspiration in the dog.
Differential lung ventilation with positive end expiratory pressure (PEEP) improves pulmonary gas exchange when used in the supportive care of patients with severe unilateral or asymmetrical lung disease. Once the provision of selective PEEP to the two lungs is accomplished, the best method of partitioning the tidal volume between the two lungs is unknown. Twelve mongrel dogs were given a unilateral hydrochloric acid (HCl) aspiration injury. ⋯ In all three groups considered simultaneously, unilateral PEEP improved PaO2 and venous admixture. The equal tidal volume distribution was the only group to show a significant improvement in PaO2 at both PEEP increments (0 to 1.36 kPa and 2.72 kPa). There was a significant difference in tidal volume allocation between the three groups with the equal end-tidal and equal pause pressure groups only minimally ventilating the injured lung.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1983
Case ReportsSubdural haematoma. A rare but life-threatening complication after spinal anaesthesia.
A 70-year-old patient developed severe headache after spinal anaesthesia. He was treated with an epidural autologous blood patch with only temporary relief. Three weeks after the spinal anaesthesia, the headache became more intense and was accompanied by nausea and vomiting. ⋯ The patient became unconscious and an acute CT scan revealed a large subdural haematoma. This was immediately evacuated and the patient made a good recovery. This case demonstrates that subdural haematoma should be considered as a possible aetiology in severe postspinal headache.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 1983
Comparative StudyMeasurement of cardiac stroke volume during cesarean section: a comparison between impedance cardiography and the dye dilution technique.
Simultaneous determination of cardiac stroke volume by impedance cardiography and the dye dilution technique was compared in ten women undergoing elective cesarean section performed under general or epidural anesthesia. The influence of delivery and the anesthetic procedures used on stroke volume determination by the two methods was evaluated and compared. The correlation coefficients for measurements performed before and during anesthesia showed little variation and were largely unchanged after delivery of the child (r = 0.90-0.97). ⋯ However, there was no significant difference between the mean change in stroke volume determined by the two techniques during serial measurements. Impedance cardiography was found to be a safe, reliable, non-invasive technique for the measurement of changes in stroke volume during cesarean section. The ability of the impedance method to determine changes in stroke volume was unaffected by the anesthetic procedures employed or by delivery of the child.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Aug 1983
Selective PEEP in acute bilateral lung disease. Effect on patients in the lateral posture.
Seven patients with acute respiratory failure due to diffuse and fairly uniform lung disease were studied during mechanical ventilation in the lateral decubital position with: (a) zero end-expiratory pressure (ZEEP) through a double-lumen oro-bronchial tube to permit a recording of the ventilation to each lung; (b) bilateral positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of 1.2 kPa, with maintenance of ventilation distribution between lungs as observed during ZEEP; (c) selective PEEP of 1.2 kPa, applied to the dependent lung only, with ventilation as during ZEEP; and (d) conventional PEEP of 1.2 kPa applied to both lungs through a single-lumen tube, with free distribution of ventilation between the lungs. During ZEEP, 69% of ventilation was distributed to the non-dependent and 31% to the dependent lung; cardiac output was 6.51 X min-1, venous admixture (QS/QT) 40% and arterial oxygen tension (PaO2) 8.3 kPa. With bilateral PEEP, functional residual capacity (FRC) increased by 0.331, cardiac output was reduced to 5.11 X min-1 and venous admixture to 32%. ⋯ With selective PEEP the dependent lung FRC increased by 0.211 and the FRC of the non-dependent lung decreased by 0.081. Cardiac output increased to 6.11 X min-1, which was no longer significantly different from that during ZEEP. Venous admixture remained at the same level as with bilateral PEEP.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)