Regional anesthesia
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Regional anesthesia · Jan 1990
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialChloroprocaine and lidocaine decrease hospital stay and admission rate after outpatient epidural anesthesia.
Lumbar epidural anesthesia with 20 ml of either 3% 2-chloroprocaine (C), 1.5% lidocaine (L), or 1.5% mepivacaine (M) with epinephrine was studied in 84 outpatients undergoing surgery (extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL]. The average duration of the procedure was 31.9 minutes. The total duration of sensory anesthesia was 133 +/- 28 minutes (C), 182 +/- 38 (L), and 247 +/- 42 (M) (p less than 0.05). ⋯ There was a trend to an increasing rate of unplanned overnight hospital admission with increasing duration of the local anesthetic drug employed. Continuous epidural anesthesia with C, L or M appears safe and effective for outpatient surgical procedures such as ESWL. In contrast to previous understanding, mepivacaine produces significantly longer anesthesia and recovery times and may not be optimal for outpatient epidural use.
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Regional anesthesia · Jan 1990
A prospective study on reproducibility of the spread of spinal anesthesia using plain 0.5% bupivacaine.
This prospective study was carried out to determine whether a spinal block with plain 0.5% bupivacaine spreads similarly when repeated in the same patient. During a 14-month period, 50 patients underwent from two to five spinal anesthesias using identical anesthetic technique, including the same premedication, the same volume of injected plain 0.5% bupivacaine, the same site of injection and the same position of the patient. Plain 0.5% bupivacaine was injected with the patient lying in the lateral horizontal position. ⋯ Regression analysis showed that the reproducibility of the maximal analgesic segmental spread of the second anesthesia on the basis of the initial anesthesia was highly significant (p less than 0.0001). The blocking results of the patients who underwent from three to five anesthesias within the study period were in accordance with the spread of the first anesthesia. If a higher or lower spread of anesthesia is desirable, a modification or another local anesthetic for the spinal anesthesia may be preferred.
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Regional anesthesia · Jan 1990
Review Biography Historical ArticleThe Bier block after 80 years: a historical review.
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Smooth emergence from general endotracheal anesthesia is frequently complicated by coughing induced by stimulation from an endotracheal tube. Lidocaine and other local anesthetics have been shown to anesthetize important rapidly adpating stretch receptors in the dog trachea. With the aim of providing a reservoir for continuous lidocaine release to adjacent tracheal tissue, we examined the ability of clinically used concentrations of lidocaine to diffuse across a commonly used endotracheal tube cuff. ⋯ The highest concentration obtained was 17.49 +/- 2.03 micrograms/mL after 360 minutes. We conclude lidocaine diffuses across endotracheal tube cuffs in a fashion that may enable the cuff to serve a potentially useful role as a reservoir for local anesthetic. This in turn appears to have the potential to smooth emergence from general endotracheal anesthesia in those patients in whom tracheal stimulation may be a complicating factor.