British journal of anaesthesia
-
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study
A double-blinded randomized evaluation of alfentanil and morphine vs fentanyl: analgesia and sleep trial (DREAMFAST).
Patients using fentanyl patient-controlled analgesia (PCA), the standard first-line choice in our hospitals, commonly complain of postoperative sleep disruption due to pain. The aim of this study was to determine whether the PCA combination of alfentanil and morphine, which provides longer analgesia without compromising onset speed, would improve postoperative pain-related sleep interference. ⋯ Despite better early postoperative analgesia, pain-related sleep interference was not improved by the PCA combination of alfentanil and morphine. AUSTRALIAN NEW ZEALAND CLINICAL TRIALS REGISTRY: Ref: ACTRN12608000118303.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Intraoperative tissue oxygenation and postoperative outcomes after major non-cardiac surgery: an observational study.
The relationship between tissue oxygen saturation (StO(2)) and serious postoperative complications remains unclear. We tested the hypothesis that perioperative in patients undergoing major non-cardiac surgery is inversely related to serious surgical outcomes. ⋯ Minimum perioperative peripheral tissue oxygenation predicted a composite of major complications and mortality from major non-cardiac surgery. This is an observational association and whether clinical interventions to augment tissue oxygenation will improve outcomes remains to be determined.
-
Randomized Controlled Trial
Does warm-up using mental practice improve crisis resource management performance? A simulation study.
Mental practice (MP) is defined as the 'symbolic rehearsal of a physical activity in the absence of any gross-muscular movements' and has been used in sport and music to enhance performance. In healthcare, MP has been demonstrated to improve technical skill performance of surgical residents. However, its effect on crisis resource management (CRM) skills has yet to be determined. We aimed to investigate the effect of warm-up with MP on CRM skill performance during a simulated crisis scenario. ⋯ Unlike technical skills, warm-up with MP does not seem to improve CRM skills in simulated crisis scenarios.
-
Conventional coagulation test are not useful to guide haemostatic therapy in severe bleeding due to their long turn-around time. In contrast, early variables assessed by point-of-care thromboelastometry (ROTEM(®)) are available within 10-20 min and increasingly used to guide haemostatic therapy in liver transplantation and severe trauma. However, the reliability of early ROTEM(®) variables to predict maximum clot firmness (MCF) in non-cardiac surgery patients with subnormal, normal, and supranormal MCF has not yet been evaluated. ⋯ Early values of clot firmness allow for fast and reliable prediction of ROTEM(®) MCF in non-cardiac patients with subnormal, normal, and supranormal MCF values and therefore can be used to guide haemostatic therapy in severe bleeding.
-
Intraoperative nerve lesions can lead to chronic postoperative pain. There are conflicting data as to whether or not anaesthetics administered intraoperatively are beneficial. We investigated if remifentanil administered at the time of nerve injury was able to attenuate neuropathic hypersensitivity. ⋯ High-dose remifentanil administered at the time of transection of the spinal nerve at L5 prevents subsequent thermal hyperalgesia.