Masui. The Japanese journal of anesthesiology
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Differences in the supramaximal current (STIM) and sensitivity of the transducer (SENS) after calibration using mode "CAL2" of the neuromuscular accelermyography (TOF-Watch SX, MSD, Japan) between type 2 diabetic and non-diabetic patients were evaluated undergoing general anesthesia. ⋯ It is demonstrated that the values in the SENS and the recovery speed (T1-T2 time) under measuring the degree of neuromuscular blockade by TOF stimulation were significantly higher in diabetic patients compared to non-diabetic patients. The present study provides additional confirmation of low neuromuscular response under peripheral electrical stimulation using TOF-Watch SX in type 2 diabetes patients, and attention should be paid to the evaluation of neuromuscular block using TOF-Watch SX in diabetic patients.
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The Japanese government promotes palliative care and our hospital has the palliative care team including an anesthesiologist for better end of lives of cancer patients. ⋯ Anesthesiologists familiar with pain, sedation and nausea control are important specialists in the palliative care team.
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Rad-87 and RRa are new acoustic monitoring devices which can monitor the respiratory rate. To our knowledge, no studies have reported the RRa sensor used in pediatric patients after surgery. We succeeded in measuring the respiratory rate with the RRa sensor in the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit(PICU). ⋯ Furthermore, RRa could count his respiratory rate, during transfer from the operating room to PICU. The patient was sedated with dexmedetomidine (0.28 microg . kg-1 . min-1) at PICU, and his respiratory rate was accurately measured with the RRa sensor. We hope that Rad-87 and RRa sensors will become useful for measuring the respiratory rate in pediatric patients in the future.
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Case Reports
[Combined spinal-epidural anesthesia for caesarean section in a parturient with scoliosis].
An emergency caesarean section was performed in a 38-year-old parturient with pregnancy-induced hypertension at week 31 of gestation because of nonreassuring fetal status. A chest X-ray revealed mild spinal scoliosis. We attempted a combined spinal-epidural anesthesia in the parturient because the Cobb angle was only 28 degrees. ⋯ Analgesia was achieved from the T6 to S regions, and the caesarean section was completed uneventfully. A postoperative X-ray and computed tomography scan revealed that the rotation of the lumbar spine was so severe that the spaces between the laminae of the lumbar regions were shifted to the left and narrowed. Therefore, the puncture of the epidural and subarachnoid spaces was difficult, suggesting that the degree of lumbar spine rotation is more important than the thoracic spine curvature for successful epidural and spinal anesthesia in parturients with scoliosis.