Anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Antagonism of atracurium with neostigmine. Effect of dose on speed of recovery.
In 36 patients in whom anaesthesia was maintained with nitrous oxide and 0.5% isoflurane an atracurium-induced neuromuscular block was either allowed to recover spontaneously or antagonised with one of four doses of neostigmine (15 micrograms/kg, 35 micrograms/kg, 55 micrograms/kg or 75 micrograms/kg). The recovery times to a train-of-four ratio of 0.5, 0.75 and 0.9 were recorded. In patients given neostigmine, antagonism was at an average T1 of between 8.8% and 14.9%. ⋯ Recovery after neostigmine 15 micrograms/kg was significantly slower than after the higher doses. One patient given neostigmine 75 micrograms/kg showed an unusual bimodal pattern of recovery. There appears to be no benefit in giving a larger dose than 35 micrograms/kg of neostogmine as a single bolus.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Patient-controlled on-demand epidural fentanyl. A comparison of patient-controlled on-demand fentanyl delivered epidurally or intravenously.
A prospective, open, clinical trial is described in which 20 patients having upper abdominal surgery were randomly allocated to receive fentanyl for postoperative analgesia by patient-controlled demand analgesic computer by either the epidural or intravenous route. Hourly pain, sedation and nausea scores were very similar in the two groups during the first 24 hours after surgery. What few differences there were favoured the epidural group. There was a highly significant difference in fentanyl consumption between the two groups, with the intravenous group demanding consistently more than twice as much as the epidural group.