British journal of anaesthesia
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This survey compared the safety of 261 healthy mothers of whom 170 received extradural and 91 general anaesthesia for Caesarean section. Anaesthetics were conducted in routine hospital practice by six anaesthetic registrars. ⋯ Hypotension occurred in 11 patients, inadequacy of analgesia in 25 patients and a period of unawareness in 16 patients following sedation after delivery. Extradural block for Caesarean section is thus seen as safer than general anaesthesia when performed by the same group of anaesthetic trainees on healthy mothers.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Pretreatment with vecuronium as a prophylactic against post-suxamethonium muscle pain. Comparison with other non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs.
One hundred and ninety-eight patients undergoing minor surgery were assessed for evidence of post-suxamethonium muscle pain on the 1st and 2nd days following surgery. Patients were allocated to nine groups and were given one of four non-depolarizing neuromuscular blocking drugs (vecuronium, gallamine, tubocurarine or pancuronium) 1 or 2 min before the administration of suxamethonium. A control group received an inert medication. ⋯ This frequency was decreased to around 20% following pretreatment. In general, the frequency of pain was less in the groups receiving pretreatment at 1 min, but the difference was not significant. The groups receiving vecuronium before suxamethonium had the lowest overall frequency of pain over the 2 days (19%), although this was not significantly different from other pretreatments.
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The neuromuscular and cardiac vagus blocking actions of pancuronium, vecuronium (Org NC45) and their respective potential hydroxy metabolites have been studied in the chloralose-anaesthetized cat. Pancuronium was three times more potent as a neuromuscular blocker than its 3-hydroxy derivative, 20 times more potent than the 17-hydroxy derivative and 45 times more potent than the 3,17-dihydroxy derivative. The vagal:neuromuscular block ratios measured at 50% inhibition for these compounds were pancuronium 3.0, 3-hydroxy derivative 6.4, 17-hydroxy derivative 1.1 and 3,17-dihydroxy derivative 0.36 (a value greater than unity indicated greater potency at the neuromuscular junction). ⋯ In addition, the time-course of its action was not different from that of vecuronium. Thus, it is concluded that this potential metabolite is unlikely to give rise to tachycardia in man. It is unlikely that the 17-hydroxy and 3,17-dihydroxy derivatives of vecuronium would be produced in sufficiently great quantities by metabolism from vecuronium to result in either tachycardia or residual neuromuscular blockade.
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Inaccuracy of oesophageal pressure for pleural pressure estimation in supine anaesthetized subjects.
Oesophageal pressure was measured, using a balloon and catheter system, at three or four positions in the oesophagus of eight supine subjects anaesthetized with 1-1.5% halothane in 67% nitrous oxide. Airway pressure and the difference between airway and oesophageal pressures were recorded during occlusion of inspiration, occlusion of expiration and occlusion of expiration followed by inspiratory occlusion. ⋯ The change in oesophageal pressure was expressed as a fraction of the change in airway pressure: the maximum fraction was obtained in each patient, and the mean of these maximum values was 82%. This suggests that changes in the difference between airway and oesophageal pressures will overestimate the change in transpulmonary pressure during artificial ventilation in supine subjects, and that lung compliance would be underestimated.
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Continuous intercostal nerve blockade was used to provide analgesia after cholecystectomy. The blockade was maintained by the insertion of a single extradural catheter into an appropriate intercostal space and by "topping-up" with local anaesthetic on demand. ⋯ A mean improvement of 37% on pre- "top-up" peak flows, was found. It is suggested that continuous intercostal analgesia is a a safe, reliable and powerful form of analgesia which may improve respiratory function after cholecystectomy.