Paediatric anaesthesia
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2017
Practice GuidelinePerioperative intravenous fluid therapy in children: guidelines from the Association of the Scientific Medical Societies in Germany.
This consensus- based S1 Guideline for perioperative infusion therapy in children is focused on safety and efficacy. The objective is to maintain or re-establish the child's normal physiological state (normovolemia, normal tissue perfusion, normal metabolic function, normal acid- base- electrolyte status). Therefore, the perioperative fasting times should be as short as possible to prevent patient discomfort, dehydration, and ketoacidosis. ⋯ Additional BS without glucose can be used in patients with circulatory instability until the desired effect is achieved. The additional use of colloids (albumin, gelatin, hydroxyethyl starch) is recommended to recover normovolemia and to avoid fluid overload when crystalloids alone are not sufficient and blood products are not indicated. Monitoring should be extended in cases with major surgery, and autotransfusion maneuvers should be performed to assess fluid responsiveness.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2017
The effect of general anesthesia for ambulatory dental treatment on children in Chongqing, Southwest China.
The incidence of early childhood caries shows a significant increasing trend. Often, children younger than 6 years need additional help to finish the dental treatment. Therefore, general anesthesia (GA) could help to provide a successful environment for pediatric dental treatment. ⋯ Children's oral health-related quality of life after DGA improved significantly. Meanwhile DGA showed a positive effect on the whole family and majority of families reported a high degree of satisfaction to it.
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Paediatric anaesthesia · Jan 2017
Oral morphine dosing predictions based on single dose in healthy children undergoing surgery.
Oral morphine has been proposed as an effective and safe alternative to codeine for after-discharge pain in children following surgery but there are few data guiding an optimum safe oral dose. ⋯ Oral morphine 200 mcg·kg(-1) then 100 mcg·kg(-1) 4 h or 150 mcg·kg(-1) 6 h achieves mean concentrations associated with analgesia. There was high serum concentration variability suggesting that respiration may be compromised in some children given these doses.