British journal of anaesthesia
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Understanding the neural correlates of consciousness has important ramifications for the theoretical understanding of consciousness and for clinical anaesthesia. A major limitation of prior studies is the use of responsiveness as an index of consciousness. We identified a collection of measures derived from unresponsive subjects and more specifically their association with consciousness (any subjective experience) or connectedness (specific experience of environmental stimuli). ⋯ NCT03284307.
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Adenotonsillectomy is the most common indication for sleep-disordered breathing in children. Measuring pharyngeal closing pressures in anaesthetised children allows identification of severe obstructive sleep apnoea. This technique could help quantify immediate surgical impact and risk stratify postoperative treatment in these patients.
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Editorial
Viscoelastic coagulation monitoring for tranexamic acid: personalised antifibrinolytic dosing?
Ex vivo viscoelastic testing can be used to assess the concentration responses to tranexamic acid in blood samples obtained from pregnant women across the three trimesters and in non-pregnant controls. Minor variations in fibrinolysis across pregnancy suggest a target tranexamic acid blood concentration of 12.5 mg L-1 for complete inhibition of fibrinolysis. Although the data support the potential utility of viscoelastic testing using the ClotPro® TPA test in maintaining therapeutic tranexamic acid concentrations during postpartum haemorrhage, it might obscure potentially crucial endogenous fibrinolysis inhibitor interactions essential to the microcirculation.
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This study in vitro comprehensively assessed reversal of the anticoagulant effects of rivaroxaban, an oral factor Xa inhibitor, using andexanet alfa and various prothrombin complex concentrate (PCC) products in a battery of tests. In static coagulation assays, andexanet alpha outperformed PCCs except for activated PCC being more effective in standard coagulation times. ⋯ In the Russell's viper venom test and anti-Xa assay, only andexanet alpha could be tested for efficacy. The antidote effects of andexanet alpha and PCCs in restoring coagulation can be qualitatively or selectively demonstrated using in vitro coagulation tests.
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Administration of subanaesthetic doses of ketamine during isoflurane anaesthesia has been shown in animals to deepen the anaesthetised state, while accelerating emergence. Duan and colleagues have now shown that the addition of subanaesthetic doses of esketamine to isoflurane has a similar effect of increasing the burst suppression ratio, while accelerating emergence. Using c-Fos expression and fibre photometry, they show that esketamine activates glutamatergic neurones in the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus, a structure that regulates wakefulness. Chemogenetic inhibition of these neurones attenuates the arousal-promoting effects, suggesting a causal role of the paraventricular nucleus of the thalamus in esketamine-mediated acceleration of recovery from anaesthesia.