Articles: analgesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Clonidine combined with sufentanil and bupivacaine with adrenaline for obstetric analgesia.
Clonidine produces analgesia via a non-opioid mechanism and it may be used as an interesting adjuvant to local anaesthetics and opioids in obstetric analgesia. To examine the effects of the addition of clonidine to bolus injections of bupivacaine, adrenaline and sufentanil, we enrolled 50 women receiving extradural analgesia for vaginal delivery into a double-blind study. They were allocated randomly to two groups: group A received a 10-ml extradural solution of bupivacaine 12.5 mg combined with adrenaline 25 micrograms and sufentanil 10 micrograms; group B received the same solution with clonidine 30 micrograms. ⋯ During the first and second stages of labour, there was no difference between the two groups in duration of analgesia after the first injection (142 min in group A; 127 min in group B), number of injections (1.8 in group A; 1.9 in group B) and the total bupivacaine requirements (33.9 mg in group A; 34 mg in group B). The quality of analgesia was evaluated as very good in both groups (23/25 in group A; 24/25 in group B). The degree of motor block or the frequency of other side effects were not enhanced by clonidine.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Nov 1993
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialEpidural analgesia with 4 mg of morphine following caesarean section: effect of injected volume.
The efficacy and side effects of epidural bolus injection of 4 mg of morphine in a volume of 2 ml, 10 ml, or 20 ml (groups I, II and III) for postoperative analgesia after caesarean section (60 patients) were evaluated. All patients had epidural anaesthesia established up to T4 level with 0.5% bupivacaine 18-20 ml, supplemented with 2% lidocaine with adrenaline, when necessary. Morphine 4 mg in either of the three volumes was injected through the epidural catheter in random order after delivery of the baby. ⋯ S.). After removal of the urinary catheter 7/20 patient in group III required carbachol for urinary retention compared to 3/20 and 4/20 patients in groups I and II (N. S.).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
[Patient-controlled analgesia with epidural pethidine or buprenorphine plus bupivacaine for postoperative analgesia].
We evaluated the efficacy of epidural patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) with pethidine or buprenorphine plus 0.25% bupivacaine for postoperative analgesia after laparotomy with a midline incision under general anesthesia. Twenty patients were randomly allocated to two groups. In one group (PCEA-P group; n = 10), epidural pethidine plus 0.25% bupivacaine by PCA with 5 mg of pethidine and 2.5 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine bolus with a lockout interval of 20 min was added to a continuous epidural infusion of 0.25% bupivacaine (2 ml.h-1) plus pethidine (100 mg.24h-1) for 72 h. ⋯ There were no significantly different analgesic effects between PCEA-P and PCEA-B for 48 h. The average doses of epidural PCA were 1.9 mg.kg-1.24 h-1 of pethidine, and 0.012 mg.kg-1.24 h-1 of buprenorphine, respectively. We conclude that PCEA-P and PCEA-B were effective for postoperative pain to the same degree for the first 48 h, but PCEA-P was superior to PCEA-B for the last 24 h.
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The Journal of urology · Nov 1993
Comparative StudyComparison of patient-controlled analgesia versus intramuscular narcotics in resolution of postoperative ileus after radical retropubic prostatectomy.
Patient-controlled analgesia has become standard practice after major abdominal operations. The benefits of patient-controlled analgesia have been well documented. However, its possible effect of prolonging postoperative ileus has not been well examined. ⋯ The patients receiving patient-controlled analgesia resolved the postoperative ileus an average of 1.0 day later than the intramuscular injection group (5.2 days versus 4.2 days p < 0.0001). Overall hospital stay was not significantly affected. Our results show that patient-controlled analgesia use prolongs postoperative ileus.