Der Anaesthesist
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We report an oesophageal foreign body in a patient with a seizure disorder secondary to encephalitis disseminata who was transferred to our department of neurosurgery because of rising intracranial pressure. He presented with confusion, motor aphasia, and dysphagia. However, the diagnosis of increased intracranial pressure could not be confirmed clinically or by computed tomography. ⋯ Therefore, an oesophagopharyngotomy was performed and the foreign body extracted. The postoperative course was complicated by pneumonia, which responded well to antibiotic treatment. The patient made an otherwise uneventful recovery and was able to eat without difficulty.
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Knowledge of normal and impaired pulmonary gas exchange is essential to the anaesthesiologist. Analysis of an arterial blood sample allows evaluation of whether or not pulmonary gas exchange is normal. For this purpose comparison with the oxygenation index or the alveolar-arterial PO2 difference is helpful. ⋯ In daily practice, venous admixture or intrapulmonary shunt can be calculated using arterial and mixed-venous blood. By analysing arterial and expired PCO2, dead-space ventilation can be determined, but extended analyses of VA/Q distribution are not possible in daily practice. However, knowledge of the principles of typical disturbances of pulmonary gas exchange in acute and chronic lung disease allows the use of therapeutic strategies based on the pathophysiological changes.
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Clinical Trial
[Perioperative endothelin, ACTH and cortisol plasma concentrations in coronary bypass patients].
To follow up endothelin (ET), adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH), and cortisol levels in patients undergoing aortocoronary bypass grafting (CABG) and to determine whether these are extracted from plasma by the pulmonary circulation. ⋯ No interrelation between ET and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis could be established by the ET, ACTH, and cortisol plasma levels. However, the significant correlation between perioperative ET and cortisol lends further support to the hypothesis of ET release by cortisol from vascular smooth-muscle cells. There is a net pulmonary clearance of ET in patients prior to CABG that is lost intra- and early postoperatively, but tends to be restored on the 1st day thereafter at an increased level.
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The advantages of the addition of low-dose sufentanil to local anaesthetics in epidural analgesia during labour (improvement of analgesia, reduction of total dose of local anaesthetic, reduction of rate of instrumental delivery outweigh) far the disadvantages (pruritus, sedation, potential maternal and neonatal respiratory depression). In over 8000 cases, the addition of incremental sufentanil (7.5 micrograms) up to 30 micrograms has not caused any negative effects on newborns, and hence, the addition of sufentanil is justified; it may even be indicated. Sufentanil has not yet been registered for epidural analgesia in Germany, in contrast to other countries. ⋯ Pain during labour is no absolute indication for the addition of sufentanil, but there are considerable arguments for its superiority in comparison to other standard procedures: the side effects and complications are very limited. Justification of this method is relatively easy in view of the fact that sufentanil has already been registered for peridural analgesia in obstetrics in many other countries. Last but not least, the patient must give informed consent before any procedure can be performed.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Postoperative warming therapy in the recovery room. A comparison of radiative and convective warmers].
Hypothermia (Tcore < 36 degrees C) can be observed in 60%-80% of all admissions to the post-anaesthetic recovery unit. Effective warming devices may accelerate rewarming, improve patient comfort, and suppress shivering thermogenesis. This study was designed to compare the efficiency of warming devices in extubated postoperative patients and their effect on postoperative oxygen uptake (VO2). ⋯ External rewarming did not reduce the average load (mean VO2). Thus, concerning the goal of accelerating rewarming, it appears more rational to prevent intraoperative heat loss. For a comparison of efficiency of different warming devices, postoperative extubated patients do not appear to be an ideal model for study.