Der Anaesthesist
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A 53-year-old man with alpha-1-antitrypsin deficiency had an 8-year history of progressive dyspnoea and two episodes of bleeding oesophageal varices with liver decompensation. After the diagnosis of terminal pulmonary emphysema (Fig. 1) and liver cirrhosis with progressive liver failure was made, he was accepted for combined lung and liver transplantation. METHODS. ⋯ CONCLUSION. The management of this combined lung and liver transplantation was performed according to the experience with isolated lung and liver transplants in our hospital. Aggressive haemodynamic and ventilatory monitoring, including systemic and pulmonary arterial fibreoptic catheters, seems of particular importance in such high-risk procedures.
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A strong consensus was reached for several changes in the guidelines for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) and emergency cardiac care (ECC) in the 1992 conference on CPR and ECC held by the Emergency Cardiac Care Committee of the American Heart Association. These new recommendations, together with differing recommendations of the European Resuscitation Council, are described. An unresponsive person with spontaneous respirations should be placed in the recovery position if no cervical trauma is suspected. ⋯ If hypomagnesaemia is present in recurrent and refractory ventricular fibrillation, it should be corrected by administration of 1 to 2 g magnesium sulfate i.v. Thrombolytic agents are classified as useful and effective in acute myocardial infarction and should be administered as early as possible. Glucose-containing fluids are discouraged for resuscitative efforts.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
[Postoperative analgesia with tramadol. Continuous infusion versus repetitive bolus administration].
Postoperative pain relief can be achieved by several methods, including the use of systemic opioids and regional anaesthesia with intrathecal or epidural opioids or local anaesthetics. On-demand analgesia using a PCA (patient-controlled analgesia) system is regarded as the ideal option for systemic opioid analgesia. While PCA devices are not yet commonly used in all recovery units, the use of repetitive boluses on demand is still the most frequent form of administration in postoperative pain therapy. ⋯ Six hours after surgery, when analgesia was evaluated by the patients, there was no significant difference between the two groups. Not until the maintenance infusion had been administered for a further 18 h, was the tramadol consumption within the infusion group significantly higher. Thus, we should consider continuing unreduced administration of the maintenance infusion 6 h after operation.
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The classification of neuromuscular diseases with regard to the use of muscle relaxants is based on the localisation of the particular abnormality. Three types of syndromes can be differentiated: (1) denervation states; (2) disturbances of neuromuscular transmission; and (3) intracellular disease. Succinylcholine should be avoided in all types of denervation syndrome due to the possibility of life-threatening hyperkalaemia. ⋯ Patients with a primary myopathy may display increased sensitivity to non-depolarising muscle relaxants. The use of drugs with acetylcholine-like actions (succinylcholine, reversal agents) should be avoided due to the danger of triggering muscle spasms in patients with myotonic disease and the risk of rhabdomyolysis in patients with dystrophic muscle disease. Irrespective of the type of muscle disease present, titration of the dose of muscle relaxant should always be done using a nerve stimulator.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Anesthesia with flunitrazepam/fentanyl and isoflurane/fentanyl. Unconscious perception and mid-latency auditory evoked potentials].
There is a high incidence of intraoperative awareness during cardiac surgery. Mid-latency auditory evoked potentials (MLAEP) reflect the primary cortical processing of auditory stimuli. In the present study, we investigated MLAEP and explicit and implicit memory for information presented during cardiac anaesthesia. ⋯ During general anaesthesia auditory information can be processed and remembered postoperatively by an implicit memory function, when the electrophysiological conditions of primary cortical stimuli processing is preserved. Implicit memory can be observed more often when high-dose opioid analgesia is combined with receptor-binding agents like the benzodiazepines than under non-specific anaesthetics like isoflurane. Non-specific anaesthetics seem to provide a more effective suppression of auditory stimuli processing than receptor-specific agents.