Anaesthesia
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Observational Study
A prospective observational study of maternal oxygenation during remifentanil patient-controlled analgesia use in labour.
Maternal desaturation is common during remifentanil PCA analgesia for labour.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
A randomised comparison of the Ambu(®) AuraGain(™) and the LMA(®) supreme in infants and children.
We conducted a randomised trial in 100 children in order to compare the clinical performance of the Ambu(®) AuraGain(™) and the LMA(®) Supreme(*) for airway maintenance during mechanical ventilation. The primary outcomes were initial and 10-min airway leak pressures. Ease, time and success rates for device and gastric tube insertion, fibreoptic grades of view, airway quality during anaesthetic maintenance, and complications were also assessed. ⋯ Ease, time and success rates for device placement, gastric tube insertion and complications were also not significantly different. Children receiving the LMA Supreme required more airway manouevers (7 vs 1 patient, p = 0.06) to maintain a patent airway. Our results suggest that the Ambu AuraGain may be a useful alternative to the LMA Supreme, as demonstrated by comparable overall clinical performance in children.
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Observational Study
Detection of volume loss using the Nexfin device in blood donors.
We investigated which haemodynamic parameters derived from Nexfin non-invasive continuous arterial blood pressure measurements are optimal to detect controlled volume loss in spontaneously breathing subjects. Haemodynamic monitoring was performed in 40 whole-blood donors. ⋯ The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve to detect volume loss was highest for cardiac index (0.94, 95% CI 0.88-0.99) and systemic vascular resistance (0.90, 95% CI 0.82-0.99). Nexfin is a non-invasive haemodynamic monitor that can feasibly detect volaemic changes in spontaneously breathing subjects.
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Multicenter Study
The contribution of the anaesthetist to risk-adjusted mortality after cardiac surgery.
It is widely accepted that the performance of the operating surgeon affects outcomes, and this has led to the publication of surgical results in the public domain. However, the effect of other members of the multidisciplinary team is unknown. We studied the effect of the anaesthetist on mortality after cardiac surgery by analysing data collected prospectively over ten years of consecutive cardiac surgical cases from ten UK centres. ⋯ Anaesthetists did not appear to affect mortality. These findings do not support public disclosure of cardiac anaesthetists' results, but substantially validate current UK cardiac anaesthetic training and practice. Further research is required to establish the potential effects of very low anaesthetic caseloads and the effect of cardiac anaesthetists on patient morbidity.
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There is little doubt that these guidelines incorporate advances made in airway management since 2004. They will change day-to-day practice of anaesthesia, as outlined above, from pre-operative airway assessment, to integrating the WHO team briefing, to the use and provision of equipment and drugs, and the recording of information on the anaesthesia chart. They will inform the later analysis of any critical airway incidents, especially as documentation and postoperative management are addressed, and they will encourage training in a range of techniques. ⋯ Formal testing may reveal which aspects of their design, complex as it is, may distract from, rather than enhance, airway management during crises. All guidelines represent a standard of care or a normative approach to a clinical problem. As such, they not only help guide clinicians, but they also provide the broader community with the opportunity to improve standards, to ensure equipment is available, and that training for the skills and processes required are in place to ensure successful adoption.