British journal of anaesthesia
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Mechanisms of respiratory depression induced by the combination of buprenorphine and diazepam in rats.
The safety profile of buprenorphine has encouraged its widespread use. However, fatalities have been attributed to benzodiazepine/buprenorphine combinations, by poorly understood mechanisms of toxicity. Mechanistic hypotheses include (i) benzodiazepine-mediated increase in brain buprenorphine (pharmacokinetic hypothesis); (ii) benzodiazepine-mediated potentiation of buprenorphine interaction with opioid receptors (receptor hypothesis); and (iii) combined effects of buprenorphine and benzodiazepine on respiratory parameters (pharmacodynamic hypothesis). ⋯ Pharmacodynamic parameters and antagonist pretreatments indicate that diazepam/buprenorphine-induced respiratory depression results from a pharmacodynamic interaction between both drugs on ventilatory parameters.
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Editorial Comment
Epidural labour analgesia and autism spectrum disorder: is the current evidence sufficient to dismiss an association?
Findings from a population-based study using a sibling-matched analysis published in this issue of the British Journal of Anaesthesia indicate that epidural labour analgesia is not associated with an increased risk of autism spectrum disorder. These findings are consistent with those from three other population-based studies that used similar methodological approaches. Cumulatively, these robust, high-quality epidemiological data support the assertion that there is no meaningful association between epidural labour analgesia and autism spectrum disorder in offspring.
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There is widespread variation in how anaesthesia is provided to individual patients even for the same types of surgery. This variation exists within departments, between hospitals, and between countries. ⋯ Local and national norms, guidance, and standards, and the positive or negative roles of key opinion leaders likely all play a part. Although clinicians may disagree where the line falls between warranted and unwarranted variations, at least some of this variation is down to anaesthetist preference, not individualised patient care.
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Buprenorphine is a partial agonist at the mu opioid receptor. Due to its relatively low maximum effect on respiratory depression it is considered by some to be a safe opioid. But it can produce serious respiratory depression, particularly when combined with sedatives such as benzodiazepines.
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Frailty is associated with poor postoperative outcomes, but existing data do not describe frailty's interaction with tumour characteristics at the time of cancer surgery. Our objective was to estimate the association between frailty and long-term survival, and to explore any interaction with tumour stage and grade. ⋯ Patient frailty is associated with decreased long-term survival after cancer surgery. The association is stronger for early-stage and -grade cancers, which would otherwise have a better survival prognosis.