Middle East journal of anaesthesiology
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Middle East J Anaesthesiol · Oct 2005
Randomized Controlled TrialWound instillation with 0.25% bupivacaine as continuous infusion following hysterectomy.
Postoperative pain relief was assessed by the effects of local anesthetic wound instillation on 100 patients who had undergone total abdominal hysterectomy with bilateral salpingo oophorectomy (TAH with BSO). Patients were divided into four groups of wound and non-wound instillation: Wound instillation Group A1 received diclofenac IM. Group A2 received diclofenac suppository. ⋯ Nausea and vomiting was less in wound instillation groups. VAS score supine from 4th to 12th hours, VAS coughing during all time interval and VAS leg raising from 3rd to 12th hours was significantly lower (P < 0.001) in wound instillation group (A1, A2) in comparison to non wound instillation groups (B1, B2). We conclude that basal bolus infusion followed by continuous wound instillation of bupivacaine decreases analgesic requirement and pain scores in first 24 hours of postoperative period after TAH with BSO.
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Tobacco smoking has been established to be a hazardous activity. Changing social attitude is bringing a decline in tobacco consumption but a significant proportion of patients presenting for surgery still continues to smoke, putting themselves at risk of perioperative complications. We evaluated induction-intubation response in 40 male patients (ASA-I) divided into two groups of 20, each consisting of smokers and non-smokers. ⋯ During induction-intubation period, heart rate; systolic, diastolic and mean arterial pressure and rate-pressure product showed more pronounced fluctuations in smokers than in non-smokers (p < 0.05).
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To look at minor complications attributable to anesthesia in adult surgical patients at our Institution and to identify various contributing factors. ⋯ The overall rate of minor complications following anesthesia was 12.6%. No complications were reported by 30% of the study population. The data has given us a benchmark for patient information and will be used for risk reduction in our Department of Anaesthesiology.
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Middle East J Anaesthesiol · Jun 2005
Randomized Controlled TrialInfusion and bolus administration of cisatracurium--effects on histamine release.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the usefulness of Cisatracurium Besilat (CB), and the method of its administration during laparotomies on adult patients, to determine whether CB caused cutaneous, systemic or chemical evidence of histamine release. This study was conducted as a randomized, double-blind clinical trial on 38 patients (ASA I-II). After a standard anesthetic induction with fentanyl and propofol, patients received an i.v. bolus CB (0.15 mg/kg in Group A (n=20) or Group B (n=18). ⋯ There was no consistent correlation between hemodynamic changes, cutaneous manifestations and histamine concentrations. We conclude that CB does not cause systemic or cutaneous histamine release. The infusion method of cisatracurium has a stable level of curarization without side effect and there were no significant recovery time differences between the groups.
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Auto-positive end expiratory pressure (auto-PEEP) is a physiologic event that is common to mechanically ventilated patients. Auto-PEEP is commonly found in acute severe asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or patients receiving inverse ratio ventilation. Factors predisposing to auto-PEEP include a reduction in expiratory time by increasing the respiratory rate, tidal volume or inspiratory time. ⋯ The work of breathing can be decreased by providing external PEEP to 75-80% of auto-PEEP in patients who are spontaneously breathing during mechanical ventilation but there is no evidence such external PEEP would be useful during controlled mechanical ventilation when there is no patient inspiratory effort. Ventilator setting should aim for a prolonged expiratory time by reducing the respiratory rate rather than increasing inspiratory flow. Routine monitoring for auto-PEEP in patients receiving controlled ventilation is recommended.