European journal of anaesthesiology. Supplement
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Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl · Sep 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial1 x ED90 dose of rocuronium bromide: tracheal intubation conditions and time-course of action.
The intubation conditions and time-course of action of a 0.3 mg kg-1 bolus of rocuronium were studied under alfentanil/propofol and fentanyl/thiopentone/enflurane anaesthesia. Forty healthy patients were randomly allocated to induction of anaesthesia with either alfentanil 20 micrograms kg-1 and propofol 2.0-2.5 mg kg-1, or fentanyl 3 micrograms kg-1 and thiopentone 4-6 mg kg-1. Approximately 5 min later, after calibration of mechanomyography, an i.v. bolus of 0.3 mg kg-1 rocuronium was administered. ⋯ The passage of the tube was rated good or excellent in 18/20 (alfentanil/propofol group) and 18/19 patients in the other group. The times of onset were 65 s and 69 s, respectively. It is concluded that a 1 x ED90 dose of rocuronium will rapidly provide good or excellent intubation conditions in the majority of cases.
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Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl · Sep 1995
Comparative Study Clinical TrialDose-response and time-course of effect of rocuronium bromide in paediatric patients.
We determined dose-response curves and spontaneous recovery of neuromuscular function following a single ED95 dose of rocuronium in 10 infants (1-11 months old), 20 children (2-12 years old) and 20 adults (20-40 years old) during nitrous oxide-oxygen-thiopentone-alfentanil anaesthesia. Neuromuscular block was recorded as adductor pollicis EMG following a supramaximal train-of-four ulnar nerve stimuli at 10 s intervals. ⋯ Time-course of recovery from an average 94% neuromuscular block was similar in all age groups with a 25-75% recovery time of 6.5 +/- 1.8, 5.7 +/- 1.8 and 6.7 +/- 1.6 min in infants, children and adults, respectively. Thus, rocuronium is an intermediate-acting muscle relaxant in all age groups.
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Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl · Sep 1995
Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialRocuronium with alfentanil and propofol allows intubation within 45 seconds.
Following induction with alfentanil (20 micrograms kg-1) and propofol (2.0-2.5 mg kg-1), four groups of patients were given rocuronium to determine conditions for rapid sequence intubation. Two groups received 0.9 mg kg-1 and two groups received 0.6 mg kg-1. ⋯ Intubating conditions were scored on a four point scale but all were rated as excellent or good. Almost all intubating conditions were excellent in the 0.9 mg kg-1 groups.
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Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl · Sep 1995
Comparative Study Clinical TrialPharmacokinetics of rocuronium bromide in patients with and without renal failure.
We studied the onset and duration of action and pharmacokinetics of rocuronium bromide during anaesthesia with nitrous oxide, fentanyl and isoflurane after a single bolus dose of rocuronium (0.6 mg kg-1) in nine patients with chronic renal failure requiring regular haemodialysis, and in nine healthy control patients. Blood samples were collected over 390 min and concentrations of rocuronium and its putative metabolites measured using HPLC. Onset time for maximum block and duration of clinical relaxation (DUR25) were 61 (SD 25.0) s and 65 (16.4) s, 55 (26.9) min and 42 (9.3) min, respectively, for patients with and without renal failure. ⋯ The pharmacokinetic data were best described by a three-exponential equation. There were significant differences between patients with and without renal failure in the rates of clearance (2.5 (1.1) mL kg-1 min-1 and 3.7 (1.4) mL kg-1 min-1, respectively) and the mean residence times (97.1 (48.7) min and 58.3 (9.6) min) (P < 0.05). The differences in other kinetic parameters were not significant.
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Eur J Anaesthesiol Suppl · Sep 1995
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial Controlled Clinical TrialTime-course of action and intubating conditions with rocuronium bromide under propofol-alfentanil anaesthesia.
Thirty ASA I and II patients received either an intubating dose of 0.6 mg kg-1 rocuronium (2 x ED95, group 1) or 0.06 mg kg-1 as a priming dose followed by an intubating dose of 0.24 mg kg-1 rocuronium (group 2) 4 min later. Anaesthesia was induced with propofol (2.0 mg kg-1) and alfentanil (0.02 mg kg-1) and maintained with nitrous oxide/oxygen and propofol (6.0 mg kg-1 h-1). Neuromuscular function was monitored mechanomyographically and electromyographically with train-of-four (TOF) stimulation at the wrist every 10 s. ⋯ Mechanomyography showed a significantly faster development of neuromuscular block than electromyography. The comparison of mechanomyographically and electromyographically measured recovery times did not show any differences. In 60% of the patients a priming dose of 0.06 mg kg-1 was followed by a considerable decrease in neuromuscular function.