Articles: analgesia.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
A comparison of the incidence of pruritus following epidural opioid administration in the parturient.
Epidural morphine is associated with a high incidence of pruritus when used for pain control in the post-Caesarean section population. The purpose of this study was to compare the incidence of pruritus associated with epidural morphine, fentanyl, buprenorphine and butorphanol. ⋯ This study demonstrated that the incidence of pruritus was significantly higher following the use of epidural morphine and fentanyl. Even though epidural butorphanol and buprenorphine exhibited a low incidence of pruritus, their duration of analgesia was not long enough to make either attractive for single-dose administration.
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Regional anesthesia · Jul 1989
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialThe effect of continuous epidural analgesia with sufentanil and bupivacaine during and after thoracic surgery on the plasma cortisol concentration and pain relief.
The effect of continuous epidural analgesia with bupivacaine 0.125% and sufentanil 0.83 micrograms.ml-1 on the plasma cortisol concentration and postoperative pain relief was compared with that of intermittent intravenous peroperative and on-demand intramuscular postoperative analgesia with nicomorphine 0.2 mg.kg-1. The study was performed on two groups of ten patients for three consecutive days after thoracic surgery. In the epidural group, a better quality of analgesia was found as measured with the Inverse Linear Analgesia Scale (ILAS) (1 = severe pain, 10 = no pain) than in the group that received intramuscular analgesia. ⋯ L-1 on day 1. The measured mean plasma cortisol concentration was found to exceed normal limits (150-700 nmol. L-1) only in the systemic group and only on day 1.
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A sixty-eight-year-old female developed severe hypotension immediately after the administration of epidural meperidine for post-thoracotomy pain. Two preceding injections of epidural opiates had been uneventful. The cardiovascular collapse was difficult to reverse and may have contributed to the patient's subsequent death. Cardiovascular complications have not been reported frequently as a possible side effect of epidural opiate analgesia.
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Case Reports
Failure of a lidocaine test dose to identify subdural placement of an epidural catheter.
We report the failure of a test dose of 3 ml lidocaine 1.5 per cent with 15 micrograms epinephrine to identify subdural placement of an epidural catheter in a parturient. Thirty-five minutes after injection of 13 ml lidocaine 1.5 per cent, intended to provide epidural analgesia, the patient developed an extensive sensory neural blockade. Some motor control was maintained and sympathetic block was incomplete. ⋯ Subdural injections are uncommon and unpredictable in their occurrence. Test doses do not consistently identify misplaced catheters. A negative response to a test dose does not guarantee that extensive neural blockade will not occur during epidural analgesia.