Minerva anestesiologica
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The paper includes a short review on paediatric anaesthesia in day surgery. It discussed on why day surgery in children is so popular since the beginning of the century; the Italian laws on this item and the guidelines of the Italian Society of Anaesthesiology on "day surgery" and "preoperatives of children".
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Post-thoracotomy pain is the most severe form of pain after surgery and is continuously exacerbated by ventilatory function. Due to the multiplicity of nociceptive inputs from the chest wall, thoracic viscera, diaphragm and postoperative chest tubes, postoperative pain may be difficult to control with single modalities. The aim is excellent analgesia with function i.e. normal ventilation and rapid mobilisation. ⋯ The most popular and probably most effective technique at the present time is thoracic epidural analgesia using a combination of different local anesthetic agents and opioids. There are few data indicating any influence on outcome of different postthoracotomy analgesic techniques. Improvement in outcome requires a co-ordinated approach from all caregivers using the best possible analgesic techniques.
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Minerva anestesiologica · May 1999
ReviewThe management of shock and local injury in traumatic rhabdomyolysis.
Rhabdomyolysis (literally "striped muscle dissolution") is a biological and clinical condition that takes to plasmatic release of myoglobin, muscle enzymes and electrolytes, relates to the lysis of stripped muscle fibers. Rhabdomyolysis presents the clinician with two distinct problems: local injury and the systemic effects directly related to that injury. Locally, muscle, vessel and nerve compression are the primary issues. ⋯ Therefore, the traumatic rhabdomyolysis has few diagnostically problems. On the other hand, their treatment is complex and must have a multidisciplinary approach. So the rhabdomyolysis actually remain a severe disease with high mortality caused principally by visceral lesions related to sepsis.
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Minerva anestesiologica · May 1999
Review[What will jugular bulb oxygen saturation monitoring tell?].
Global cerebral oxygenation can be measured by means of a catheter introduced in the internal jugular vein and placed retrograde in the jugular bulb. The measure of oxygen saturation sampled from the jugular vein (SjvO2) depends on cerebral metabolism and blood flow. This parameter describes the relative balance between oxygen delivery to the brain and oxygen consumption by the brain. ⋯ Besides this, elevated SjvO2 should not be universally interpreted as hyperaemia. Instead, the presence of an elevated SjvO2 is a heterogeneous condition. Increased SjvO2 may be alarming prognostic indicators that carry important implications for comatose patients management.