Articles: analgesia.
-
Case Reports
Respiratory muscle rigidity in a preterm infant after use of fentanyl during Caesarean section.
Fentanyl is in many neonatal intensive care units the sedative of choice. One side-effect is, however, the possibility of muscle and/or chest wall rigidity. A pregnant woman with a critical pulmonary valve stenosis had a balloon dilatation at 26 weeks of gestation. She was put on propranolol, but went into a severe cardiac failure. In week 31, she developed pregnancy induced hypertension. Periodically absent diastolic flow in the umbilical cord was demonstrated. A Caesarean section was performed using fentanyl as analgesia. A boy weighing 1440 g, had a 1 min Apgar score of 3 without respiratory movements. Mask ventilation was tried, but chest wall expansion was not achieved despite using high pressures. He was intubated and positive pressure ventilation attempted, with the same result. Despite the use of high pressures up to 60-70 cm H2O, no chest movement could be achieved. An intravenous line was established in order to give naloxone and pancuronium. Just before the drugs were given, chest wall movements were achieved and the heart rate normalized. ⋯ This is the first report on chest wall rigidity in a neonate after administration of fentanyl to the mother during Caesarean section.
-
Acta Anaesthesiol. Sin. · Dec 1998
Case ReportsPatient-controlled epidural analgesia for postherpetic neuralgia in an HIV-infected patient as a therapeutic ambulatory modality.
A 43-year-old HIV-positive male was referred to our pain clinic one month after his fourth attack of herpes zoster infection. He complained of intermittent intolerable sharp and lancinating pain accompanied by numbness over the inner aspect of the left upper extremity, left anterior chest wall and the back. Physical examination revealed allodynia over the left T1 and T2 dermatomes without any obvious skin lesion. ⋯ Epidural PCA was discontinued after 28 days. He did not complain of pain thereafter but reported a slight numb sensation still over the lesion site for a period of time. In conclusion, postherpetic neuralgia in an HIV-infected man was successfully treated with ambulatory therapeutic modality of epidural PCA for 28 days.
-
Epidural analgesia is a commonly employed technique of providing pain relief during labor. The number of parturients given intrapartum epidural analgesia is reported to be over 50 percent at many institutions in the United States. The procedure has few contraindications, the primary ones being patient refusal, maternal hemorrhage and coagulopathy. ⋯ Retrospective studies have demonstrated an association between epidural analgesia and increases in duration of labor, instrumental vaginal delivery and cesarean section for labor. However, several recent prospective studies have concluded that epidural analgesia does not adversely affect the progress of labor or increase the rate of cesarean section. These remain controversial issues among practicing physicians.