Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
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Comparative Study
[A comparison of fentanyl and buprenorphine in total intravenous anesthesia using propofol during spinal surgery].
A retrospective study was performed to compare the hemodynamic effect and postoperative pain relief of fentanyl (Group F, n = 11) and buprenorphine (Group B, n = 11) in total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA) using propofol during spinal surgery. All patients were premedicated with midazolam (3-5 mg) i.m. Anesthesia was maintained with propofol infusion, and increments of fentanyl or single dose of buprenorphine with 40% oxygen in air. ⋯ All patients in Group F, and only two in Group B (P < 0.02) received analgesics within 20 hours. Neither nausea nor respiratory depression was found in both groups. This study suggests that buprenorphine would provide a more stable hemodynamic state and better postoperative pain relief than fentanyl in TIVA using propofol.
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Cornelia de Lange syndrome involves anomalies in cardio-vascular and musculo-skeletal systems, and mental retardation. In addition, a patient with this syndrome shows a peculiar look. A 22-year-old woman with Cornelia de Lange syndrome underwent general anesthesia twice. ⋯ After the administration of 4% lidocaine 3.5 ml into the pharynx, orotracheal intubation was attempted, but was not successful. Then blind naso-tracheal intubation was performed successfully under spontaneous respiration under sevoflurane-oxygen inhalation. The induction of anesthesia with sevoflurane under spontaneous respiration was useful for blind naso-tracheal intubation in a case with difficult intubation such as in Cornelia de Lange syndrome.
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We compared our new sedation technique with propofol during spinal anesthesia (Group B, n = 50) with a previously described method by Mackenzie et al. (Group A, n = 20). In Group A, propofol was started at a rate of 6 mg.kg-1.h-1 for 10 minutes, followed by continuous infusion at a rate of 4 mg.kg-1.h-1 till the end of surgery. In Group B, propofol 0.4 mg.kg-1 was administered by a bolus injection at the beginning. ⋯ The blood concentrations of propofol in Group B was 0.946 +/- 0.076 microgram.ml-1 and 0.693 +/- 0.136 microgram.ml-1 at 5 minutes and 10 minutes after the beginning of propofol, respectively. These values were significantly lower than those reported by Kugimiya. Our newly developed method for sedation with propofol during spinal anesthesia would be safer and more effective than that previously described by Mackenzie et al.
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Hypertrophied lingual tonsils are rare, but may cause difficulty or inability in tracheal intubation during induction of general anesthesia. A 39-yr-old woman was scheduled for resection of symptomatic hypertrophied lingual tonsils. ⋯ However, transnasal fiberoscopic monitoring could guide the orotracheal fiber into the trachea for intubation. When an anesthesiologist can predict the abnormality of lingual tonsils, this combination might be recommended for difficult airway and intubation.
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Biography Historical Article
[New study on the history of anesthesiology (2)--who is the first Japanese to write a scientific paper for the journal "Anesthesiology"?].
The beginning of modern anesthesiology in Japan dates back to 1950 when Dr M. Saklad of Rhode Island Hospital came to Japan to give his lectures on endotracheal anesthesia and related procedures. Since then, many Japanese surgeons visited the United States to learn anesthesiology in depth and they began to write their papers for foreign journals. ⋯ The first paper based on studies performed in Japan by Japanese authors appeared in 1956. It was entitled as "The spread of drugs used for spinal anesthesia" by Kitahara et al. This paper is the English translation of their Japanese paper which appeared in Nippon Rinsho Geka Ikai Zasshi entitled as "Basic Study on Spinal Anesthesia in 1953".