J Natl Med Assoc
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A case of delayed detection of esophageal intubation is described. Preoxygenation and pulse oximetry were used, and the first indication of tube misplacement was arterial desaturation indicated by the pulse oximeter. The combination of preoxygenation and pulse oximetry may contribute to delays in early detection of endotracheal tube misplacement for the following reasons: (1) preoxygenation results in a pulmonary reservoir of oxygen sufficient to maintain arterial hemoglobin saturation for an extended period of time; and (2) the maintenance of normal arterial saturations for an extended period after inadvertent esophageal tube placement may lead the practitioner to initially seek other causes of declining oxygen saturations. Although pulse oximetry is an acknowledged advance in patient monitoring, it must not be utilized as an early indication of correct endotracheal tube placement.
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Ten patients underwent implantation of intrathecal morphine catheters with subcutaneous implantation of morphine Infusaid pumps for the treatment of intractable pain of malignant origin from May 1984 to October 1985. All patients exhibited a good initial response to intrathecal morphine and developed some degree of tolerance. All patients with bony metastasis and/or lumbarsacral plexopathy developed rapid tolerance. ⋯ Complications included a pump pocket infection requiring the removal of the implanted system. There was no pump failure, respiratory depression, urinary retention, or mortality related to the use of the morphine infusion system. It is recommended that intrathecal morphine infusion be instituted when narcotics have been identified as necessary for pain relief, before the development of significant systemic tolerance.