Anaesthesia
-
The incidence of tracheal tube cuff rupture was noted in 30 polyvinyl chloride tracheal tubes lubricated with three different solutions. All cuffs moistened with water were intact after 2 hours of cuff inflation whereas two of 10 lubricated with 4% lignocaine solution had burst. Both of these had leaked at the site of cuff attachment to the tube. ⋯ Four of the five had developed pinholes in the cuffs themselves. The remaining 50% of this group showed marked distortion and thinning of their intact cuff walls. The implications of these findings are discussed in view of the widespread use of PVC tracheal tubes.
-
A case of malignant hyperthermia in a small child with a chromosomal abnormality is described. The management of malignant hyperthermia in very small children is discussed.
-
Case Reports
A severe coagulopathy following volume replacement with hydroxyethyl starch in a Jehovah's Witness.
Blood volume was maintained by an infusion of hydroxyethyl starch 2000 ml (Hespan: HES) during and for the first 28 hours after a major orthopaedic operation in a 13-year-old girl who was a Jehovah's Witness. This was responsible for a generalised clinical haemorrhagic state, an acquired coagulopathy associated with a shortened thrombin, prolonged prothrombin and activated partial thromboplastin times, and an acquired von Willebrand syndrome. The coagulation, after cessation of the infusion of HES, did not become normal until approximately 72 hours later.
-
This paper considers cardiopulmonary resuscitation in obstetric patients at term and the influence of aortocaval compression on the outcome. The maximum chest compression force produced by eight physicians was measured as a function of angle of inclination using an inclined plane. The compression force at an angle of 27 degrees is 80% of that in the supine position and the Cardiff resuscitation wedge, designed to prevent aortocaval compression, is described with this inclination. ⋯ The majority had acquired errors in external chest compression and mouth to mouth ventilation. These were corrected by additional tuition. Resuscitation of the manikin on the Cardiff wedge was found to be as efficient as in the supine position.