Articles: analgesia.
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The authors evaluated the return of sensory, motor, and sympathetic nervous system function following caudal block in children. Twenty children, ASA PS I, aged 5 +/- 4 yr (mean +/- SD), weighing 22 +/- 9 kg, scheduled for lower abdominal and urologic surgical procedures were studied. Anaesthesia was induced and maintained by halothane, N2O and oxygen. ⋯ Upper level of cutaneous analgesia was T10 +/- 2 after the block. Two hours after the caudal injection an incomplete motor blockade was found in 14 of 20 children, and at 4 hours no block was found in any child. Heart rate was significantly increased in the upright position (122 +/- 12 to 131 +/- 26 bpm at 2 hours, and 110 +/- 21 to 118 +/- 28 bpm at 4 hours), whereas arterial blood pressure was unchanged in the upright position.
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A reliable, safe approach to achieving unilateral anesthesia in multiple contiguous thoracic dermatomes would be of great benefit to anesthesiologists in the acute and chronic pain setting. The multidermatomal intercostal technique is one such approach, although the anatomical mechanism of this nerve block is a matter of debate. At our pain clinic, we have used another technique, a modification of the paravertebral block, to achieve multiple segments of unilateral sensory blockade. ⋯ In order to clarify the mechanism of bilateral blockade resulting from a unilateral technique, we injected four fresh cadavers with colored latex solution using the paravertebral-peridural approach. This revealed spread of the latex across the midline prevertebrally to the contralateral paravertebral space. We conclude that the paravertebral-peridural thoracic block is a reliable, safe technique for achieving unilateral anesthesia over multiple dermatomes with a single injection.
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The causes, diagnostic features, and therapy of chronic spinal arachnoiditis are reviewed. Two unexpected results from attempted epidural injections (one of lignocaine and clonidine, and one of lignocaine, clonidine, and morphine) in patients with this condition are described. The anatomical abnormalities of the epidural and subarachnoid spaces in such patients and the consequent unpredictable and potentially dangerous results that may follow drug injection into these spaces are discussed.