Cahiers d'anesthésiologie
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Nov 1989
[Treatment of postoperative pain in children in the recovery room. Use of morphine and propacetamol by the intravenous route].
The analgesic efficiency of morphine and propacetamol for postoperative pain, in the recovery room, was studied in two groups of children, who had undergone either orthopedic or visceral surgery. An injection of 50 mcg/kg of morphine chlorhydrate was given to the first group of 239 children ASA I, who were admitted to the recovery room and who presented signs of severe pain (agitation, crying, complaining). The analgesic efficiency of morphine was judged on physiological criteria (blood pressure, heart rate) and on behavioral criteria (calming of the child). ⋯ These two successive studies show the need for an analgesic protocol for children in the recovery room. Propacetamol should be administered first and then, if insufficient, followed by only one injection of morphine. This protocol of propacetamol and morphine seems to be satisfactory and thus avoids all pernicious side effects.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Oct 1989
[Frequency of hypoxic episodes during general anesthesia in children].
We measured the frequency and extent of arterial hypoxemia during pediatric general anesthesia under routine clinical conditions. The subjects were 91 children (13 newborns, 27 infants, 37 children under 6 years, 14 children under 14 years) with normal heart and lungs scheduled for extrathoracic surgery. Mask anesthesia (spontaneous/assisted ventilation) was performed in 30 cases, endotracheal anesthesia (controlled ventilation) in 61 cases. ⋯ A body weight of 10 kg appeared to constitute a threshold: in children below this weight arterial oxygen desaturation occurred significantly more frequently (p less than 0.001), and the incidence of major episodes was significantly higher (p less than 0.005). Major episodes were almost evenly distributed between induction and awakening from anesthesia, only one episode occurred during maintenance. Desaturation was more likely to occur in intubated children than in those with a mask (p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)