Cahiers d'anesthésiologie
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[The amnesic effects of midazolam in premedication of children].
The aim of this study was to check local and general tolerance as well as anxiolytic and amnesic effects of midazolam intramuscular administration as a premedication in 4 to 10 years old children. A double blind, comparative study with a placebo was achieved, after drawing lots, in 40 children divided into two equal groups. ⋯ Also anterograde amnesia was found to be excellent: 17 children in the midazolam group did not remember a photograph shown after premedication, instead of only one in the placebo group. Anxiolytic effects, similar in both groups, cannot be considered owing to the too short interval of time from premedication to induction.
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The aim of the regional administration of opioids is to provide an efficient and prolonged analgesia. Then, opiates can be useful for postoperative analgesia and for the treatment of chronic pain of malignant origin. Analgesia is correlated with several adverse effects of which the most frequent are nausea and itching and the most severe is respiratory depression. ⋯ Opioids also act by a reduction of the motor functions of the bowel, which perhaps could reduce the incidence of anastomotic breakdowns. Finally, other effects have been reported, as anecdotes, such as the treatment of spasm after bilateral replantation of the ureters, neurologic bladder dysfunctions and enuresis. Spinal administration of opioids has also been used as a treatment of premature ejaculation.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Review[The use of opioids by the regional route in obstetrics].
Epidural and spinal administration of opioids in obstetrics can be used during labour and for cesarean section. Although these routes of administration are of limited use when opiates are employed as sole agents, the association with local anesthetics may improve the characteristics of analgesia. The administration of a local anesthetic-opiate mixture allows a reduction of the total amount of local anesthetics, thus reducing the incidence of maternal hypotension and the percentage of instrumental extraction. ⋯ Opioids may also be used for postoperative analgesia after cesarean section. Since they could be responsible for an opioid-related respiratory depression in the mother and the neonate, a strict supervision is absolutely necessary following this particular mode of administration of opiates. If human and technical means of supervision failed to bring into operation, it would be better not to use opioids by the spinal route in such a context.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Review[Secondary effects of opioids administered by the regional route].
The administration of narcotics in the subarachnoid or the epidural space is gaining acceptance for postoperative pain relief. However, the potential side effects of intrathecal and epidural use of opioids are the following: early and late respiratory depression, pruritus, nausea and vomiting, urinary retention. ⋯ Naloxone can be used to reverse the depression. Pruritus can occur in 10 to 30% of patients receiving morphine; 10 to 30% nausea and vomiting, and urinary retention occurs in 20 to 50% of patients.
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Postoperative analgesia using propacetamol was studied in 50 patients, 42 +/- 16 years old, after little or moderate surgery. Two grams of propacetamol in intravenous perfusion were administered every six hours. Three scales were utilized to note the intensity of the pain (simple verbal, behavioral and visual analogue scales), before the first injection and, one, four, six hours after. From this study, satisfactory analgesic efficiency and good tolerance of propacetamol were established.