Annales chirurgiae et gynaecologiae
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Case Reports Comparative Study
Anaesthesia for patients with multiple sclerosis.
The types of anaesthesia administered to 56 multiple sclerosis patients undergoing surgery in the different departments of the Helsinki University Central Hospital (HUCH) during a ten year period from 1973 to 1982 were studied. The perioperative and postoperative events were analyzed in relation to the method of anaesthesia. ⋯ In four patients who were given regional anaesthesia (2 spinal, 3 epidural) marked by hypotension, quite resistant to intravenous vasopressor treatment was observed. No deterioration of the multiple sclerosis was noted postoperatively which could be related to the anaesthesia.
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Comparative Study
The predictive value of three diagnostic procedures in the evaluation of palpable breast tumours.
In a prospective study of 200 palpable breast tumours of 200 women, the diagnostic specificity and sensitivity of clinical examination, mammography, and fine needle aspiration were compared, alone and in combinations. All tumours were excised and examined histologically, and 38 were malignant. The diagnostic sensitivity of clinical examination was high, 98% (91-99), whereas the specificity was rather low, 48% (36-60). ⋯ It is concluded that the possibility of distinguishing between malignant and benign palpable breast tumours is not increased by adding mammography and/or fine needle aspiration, but the discovery of two non-palpable malignant tumours by mammography underscores the importance of this method in disclosing subclinical malignant lesions. The study disclosed a statistical possibility of overlooking a few malignant tumours when using these three procedures. Therefore, we advise that all palpable breast tumours should be excised.
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This review includes a brief discussion of the indications and pitfalls of regional anaesthetic techniques commonly used during parturition. Emphasis is given to the physiological changes of pregnancy and the potential effects on the fetus. The criteria for the choice of local anaesthetic are also presented.
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Narcotics have been shown to act selectively upon nociceptive synaptic junctions in laminae 1 and 2 of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. Subarachnoid or epidural injection of narcotics can produce selective segmental analgesia of great intensity and prolonged duration that is free of motor or sympathetic blockade. However, poorly lipid-soluble drugs, such as morphine, that tend to linger in the water phase of the CSF may spread rostrally to involve opiate receptors in brain stem nuclei. ⋯ Obstetrical pain is less amenable to this approach. Effective and safe management of acute pain requires that the patients be under adequate surveillance to avoid the danger of insidious respiratory depression. Chronic malignant pain is well controlled by relatively small doses of narcotic, and these patients can be managed at home on a long-term basis.
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Sufficient placental blood flow is mandatory for the well-being of the fetus. The delicate balance between uterine perfusion pressure and uterine vascular resistance can be critically disturbed during epidural anaesthesia. Maternal hypotension is common when extensive block for Caesarean Section is used. ⋯ Epinephrine (less than or equal to 50 micrograms), added to the local anaesthetic, will not decrease IBF. IBF can be severely reduced in pregnancy-induced hypertension (PIH) since the fetus is chronically asphyxiated it is crucial to avoid any further decrease in IBF. Extensive sympathetic blockade (T8) using epidural analgesia (10 ml dose of 1.a.) has been shown to significantly (p less than 0.01) improve IBF in parturients with PIH by decreasing uteroplacental vascular resistance.