Minerva anestesiologica
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Minerva anestesiologica · May 1995
Clinical Trial[Ultrasonography-guided identification of the lumbar epidural space].
The study was designed to assess the reliability of sonographic evaluation in the prediction of the depth of the lumbar epidural space. Forty males, scheduled for epidural anesthesia for surgical repair of inguinal hernia, were prospectively studied. Patients were placed in a sitting position and sagittal scanning of the lumbar spine was performed with a 5-MHz transducer over the fourth or fifth interspace in order to identify the deeper hyperechogen interface, which represents the landmark between the ligamentum flavum and the epidural space. ⋯ The potential for using ultrasounds for prediction of the distance from skin to epidural space was analyzed using a simple linear regression analysis; p values < 0.05 were considered significant. Mean values of ultrasound depth and needle depth were respectively 51 mm (SD 6.3) and 50.9 mm (SD 6.2); the correlation coefficient was 0.99. Ultrasound scanning of the lumbar spine provides an accurate measurement of the depth of the epidural space, which can facilitate the performance of the epidural anaesthesia and may decrease the complication rate, particularly in those patients in which anatomic landmarks are obscured.
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Minerva anestesiologica · May 1995
Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical Trial[Comparison of 2 modified Fick methods and thermodilution for determining the cardiac output in patients with mechanical ventilation].
To evaluate the effectiveness of two cardiac output measurement methods based on a modified Fick equation, that calculate the O2 consumption (VO2) dividing the CO2 production (VCO2) by a fixed respiratory quotient (RQ). ⋯ The correlation coefficients of the two modified Fick methods with COTD are good, and the mean differences between their results and the gold standard are small, but the low precision of both tested methods demonstrated by the very large limits of agreement, severely reduce the clinical reliability of the measurements. Only for the less than 7 L cardiac outputs the COFra limits of agreement with COTD are narrow enough, and in this range the technique can be useful e.g. revealing a low cardiac output.