AANA journal
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This article examines successful management of an anesthesia machine failure with the Draeger (or Dräger) Apollo (Draeger Inc) anesthesia workstation. Approximately 45 minutes into the case, while the patient was under general anesthesia and mechanical ventilation, the anesthesia machine failed to achieve positive pressurization following a high-pressure alarm. Despite multiple maneuvers, the issue did not resolve until the machine was manually powered off and on at the main power switch. This case report emphasizes the importance of always having a backup means of patient ventilation and anesthesia administration.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Sevoflurane Consumption During Inhalational Induction in Children: A Randomized Comparison of Minute Ventilation-Based Techniques With Standard Fixed Fresh Gas Flow Technique.
This study was done to ascertain the optimum fresh gas flow (FGF) offering the best balance between rapid induction and minimal waste in pediatric patients. Forty-five children (weighing 10-20 kg) undergoing elective procedures under general anesthesia were randomly assigned into 3 groups: 0.5 minute ventilation (MV), MV, and S (FGF = 6 L/min). After priming the pediatric closed circuit, anesthesia was induced using a face mask with 8% sevoflurane in 100% oxygen (Draeger Primus Vista 120 anesthesia machine) at FGF-determined MV per group allocation. ⋯ Sevoflurane consumption (3.8 vs 5.8 vs 9.2 mL) and cost of sevoflurane (104.2 vs 199.4 vs 312.8 rupees) were lowest in group 0.5 MV (P < .001). There was no difference in hemodynamic parameters, movement on cannulation/LMA insertion, and rescue propofol boluses required. For pediatric sevoflurane induction, half the MV-based FGF provided similar anesthetic conditions for LMA insertion with minimum sevoflurane consumption.