British journal of anaesthesia
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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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Building on their known ability to influence sleep and arousal, Li and colleagues show that modulating the activity of glutamatergic pedunculopontine tegmental neurones also alters sevoflurane-induced hypnosis. This finding adds support for the shared sleep-anaesthesia circuit hypothesis. However, the expanding recognition of many neuronal clusters capable of modulating anaesthetic hypnosis raises the question of how disparate and anatomically distant sites ultimately interact to coordinate global changes in the state of the brain. Understanding how these individual sites work in concert to disrupt cognition and behaviour is the next challenge for anaesthetic mechanisms research.
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Chronic pain is a common, complex, and challenging condition, for which specialised healthcare is required. We investigated the relationship between multisite chronic pain (MCP) and different disease traits identify safe biomarker interventions that can prevent MCP. ⋯ We established that MCP has an effect on health conditions covering various physiological systems and identified six novel biomarkers for intervention. In particular, S100A6, PTN9, NEUG, and ferritin light chain represent promising targets for MCP prevention, as no significant side-effects were predicted in our study.
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Delayed emergence from general anaesthesia poses a significant perioperative safety hazard. Subanaesthetic doses of ketamine not only deepen anaesthesia but also accelerate recovery from isoflurane anaesthesia; however, the mechanisms underlying this phenomenon remain elusive. Esketamine exhibits a more potent receptor affinity and fewer adverse effects than ketamine and exhibits shorter recovery times after brief periods of anaesthesia. As the paraventricular thalamus (PVT) plays a pivotal role in regulating wakefulness, we studied its role in the emergence process during combined esketamine and isoflurane anaesthesia. ⋯ Our results suggest that esketamine promotes recovery from isoflurane anaesthesia by activating PVTGlu neurones. This mechanism could explain the rapid arousability exhibited upon treatment with a low dose of esketamine.
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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.