Der Anaesthesist
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Sufentanil: the effect on cardiocirculatory parameters and intubation conditions on administration of pancuronium or vecuronium].
A lack of uniform methodology used in the assessment of moderate doses of sufentanil in combination with non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs formed the basis of the current study which compared under randomized conditions the effects of sufentanil-pancuronium versus sufentanil-vecuronium on hemodynamics, intubating conditions and chest wall rigidity during induction of anesthesia. MATERIAL and METHODS. One hundred and twenty ASA physical status I and II patients aged between 20 and 40 years of age who were undergoing elective urological surgery were included in the study. ⋯ Neuromuscular transmission was monitored with the Datex Relaxograph, a neuromuscular transmission analyzer, that utilizes the integration of the EMG response. Producing train-of-four (TOF) stimuli, with a pulse width of 100 microseconds and a frequency of 2 Hz every 20 s the following parameters were recorded by the Datex Relaxograph: The percentage of first twitch amplitude compared with the reference (T1), and the train-of-four (TOF) ratio, i.e., the ratio of last twitch height to first height. Measurements were taken after premedication in the operating room, the value which served as a baseline (t0), 1 min after sufentanil or placebo (t1), 1 min after priming or placebo (t2), 1 min after thiopentone (t3), and 1 min after intubation (t4).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Experimental evidence from various neuropsychological and neurophysiological fields indicates that an oscillatory brain mechanism in a frequency range of 30-40 Hz is necessary for adequate sensory information processing. An oscillatory component of that particular frequency range can also be observed in the mid-latency auditory evoked potentials. Thus general anesthesia can be defined as a suppression of sensory information processing, and the effect of the i.v. anesthetics, Propofol and ketamine, on auditory perception and auditory-evoked potentials was therefore studied. ⋯ In contrast to Propofol, ketamine does not alter auditory perception. Suppression of sensory information processing must take place at a higher cortical level in a dissociative manner. The persistence of a 30-40 Hz oscillation must be seen in connection with dreams and hallucinations as reported for the drug and may be interpreted as insufficient suppression of sensory information processing under ketamine anesthesia.
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Since ketamine has been incriminated as triggering malignant hyperthermia (MH) [3, 9, 13, 14, 18], but has still been used uneventfully in MH susceptible patients, we performed an in vitro study to examine the safety of ketamine for use in human MH. METHODS. Muscle specimens of 20 patients who had muscle biopsies to diagnose MH were investigated. ⋯ Analogous findings in frog sartorius muscles can be found in the literature. Whereas the effect of ketamine on indirectly stimulated muscle has been investigated by several authors, the underlying mechanism of ketamine-induced twitch suppression in directly stimulated muscles is not known. Inhibition of calcium release from or accelerated uptake into the sarcoplasmatic reticulum have been reported.
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Review Historical Article
[Spongia somnifera. Medieval milestones on the way to general and local anesthesia].
Medieval medicine was highly innovative compared to ancient and early modern medicine. The achievements then did not merely comprise new models from the viewpoint of the history of science: development of the university, a well-defined curricula and official degrees, obligatory fees and cost reducing measures. They also included therapeutic procedures like nerve suture, antisepsis, chemotherapy (colchicine), cardiac glycosides (scillaren, convallerin), the development of visual aids (binoculars, magnifying glass, microscope, presbyopic glasses) and further improvement of plastic surgery by the application of delayed grafts (lips/nose plastic). ⋯ This holds true for the extirpation of abdominal tumors as well as for the concept of therapeutic fever. It also pertains to anesthesia, which in the Middle Ages was developed from ancient methods of sedation. Medieval scholars perfected the method into achieving the first total anesthesia (resorption/inhalation anesthesia) and then local anesthesia (application of morphine at the cornea).