Anesthesia progress
-
Anesthesia progress · Jan 1992
ReviewKetamine: a review of its pharmacologic properties and use in ambulatory anesthesia.
The administration of intravenous agents is the most commonly used method in Canada and the United States to produce sedation or general anesthesia for dental procedures. Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, has several advantageous physical, pharmacokinetic, and pharmacodynamic properties. It can be used to induce anesthesia, sedation, analgesia, and amnesia. ⋯ However, adverse effects have been demonstrated, such as cardiovascular stimulation and unpleasant emergence phenomena, both of which may be modulated by supplementation with benzodiazepines. An increase in the use of ketamine for ambulatory anesthesia has recently been advocated. This review of the literature supports the use of ketamine as an effective agent for selected anesthetic procedures.
-
Anesthesia progress · Jan 1992
Comparative StudySupplemental oxygen after outpatient oral and maxillofacial surgery.
Arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2) was monitored postoperatively with pulse oximetry in 72 dental patients. Intravenous general anesthesia was employed in 57 patients. All of these patients received supplemental oxygen intraoperatively, and of these, 29 received supplemental oxygen postoperatively. ⋯ Patients with a smoking history had more episodes of desaturation than did nonsmokers in the group that received general anesthesia and breathed room air postoperatively. The total amount of methohexital administered had no significant effect on the number of patients with desaturation episodes. These observations emphasize the need for postoperative oxygen for patients who undergo general anesthesia for outpatient oral and maxillofacial surgery.
-
Addition of a vasoconstrictor to a local anesthetic may have several beneficial effects: a decrease in the peak plasma concentration of the local anesthetic agent, increase in the duration and the quality of anesthesia, reduction of the minimum concentration of anesthetic needed for nerve block, and decrease of blood loss during surgical procedures. The addition of a vasoconstrictor to a local anesthetic may also have detrimental effects. A review of the literature indicates that vasoconstrictor concentrations in local anesthetics marketed for dental use in the United States are not always optimal to achieve the purposes for which they are added. In most cases, a reduced concentration of vasoconstrictor could achieve the same goal as the marketed higher concentration, with less side-effect liability.