Articles: surgery.
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Plast. Reconstr. Surg. · Apr 1994
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical TrialOral premedication for local anesthesia in plastic surgery: prospective, randomized, blind comparison of lorazepam and temazepam.
Patients undergoing plastic surgical procedures under local anesthesia as inpatients were entered into a phase III randomized, blind trial designed to compare two commonly used oral premedications, lorazepam and temazepam. The effects of the drugs on each patient's memory, pain, sedation, and anxiety were assessed by questions asked of the patient, the nurse, and the surgeon. ⋯ There was no significant difference in anxiolysis between the two premedications (p = 0.20). If premedication is indicated, we advocate the use of lorazepam rather than temazepam as premedication for plastic surgical procedures to be performed under local anesthesia, provided there is adequate postoperative supervision.
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Pain and pain-related sympathoadrenergic reactions (hypertension, tachycardia) accompanied by nausea, vomiting and shivering are the most common side effects of recovery from anaesthesia. The alpha(2)agonist clonidine acts as a sedative, anxiolytic, antihypertensive, antiemetic, antisialogogue and decreases the incidence of shivering. Thus, we studied the effects of intraoperatively administered clonidine on the recovery period and the postoperative analgesic requirements in patients undergoing maxillofacial surgery. ⋯ Opiates are frequently used as analgesics after maxillofacial surgery, even though their most common side effect-respiratory depression, nausea and vomiting-are particularly dangerous in these patients because of the obstruction of the upper respiratory tract. Self-titration of the opiate dosage on demand can decrease the incidence of serious side effects. Clonidine administered intraoperatively caused a profound reduction in analgesic requirements in this study. Additional opiate administration in the postoperative period was unnecessary in nearly all clonidine-treated patients. The attenuating effect on sympathoadrenergic reactions leads to lowering of the rate-pressure product and may be of advantage for patients suffering from arterial hypertension, angina pectoris or bronchial asthma. The slower emergence from anaesthesia following clonidine administration is probably caused by double-blind study properties preventing full consideration of the decreased isoflurane requirements after clonidine.
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Pain prophylaxis is an everyday experience in clinical anaesthesia. There is now considerable experimental evidence that short-term nociceptive stimuli evoke a long-lasting excitatory state of the central nervous system. This excitatory state can be largely prevented by relatively small doses of anaesthetics (local anaesthetics, opioids) given prelesionally. ⋯ Pre-emptive analgesia is advantageous in out-patient surgery as well as for routine clinical anaesthesia, and has proved effective in the prevention of phantom limb pain. Many questions on the nature and clinial application of pre-emptive analgesia are still unanswered. However, its ease of performance and the clear clinical advantages of pain prophylaxis mean that it should have a place in the everyday practice of anaesthesia.
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Journal of anesthesia · Mar 1994
The effects of low-dose midazolam for induction of high-dose fentanyl anesthesia for coronary artery bypass graft.
A small dose of midazolam 0.06 mg/kg or diazepam 0.15 mg/kg was used for induction of high-dose fentanyl (50 μg/kg) anesthesia in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass grafting operation. Hemodynamic variables were measured 5 min after the injection of midazolam or diazepam, after the end of the fentanyl infusion, and following endotracheal intubation. ⋯ Heart rate was decreased in the diazepam group but not in the midazolam group. Therefore, a small dose of midazolam may be a suitable induction agent for high-dose fentanyl anesthesia in patients with coronary artery disease.
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Interpleural analgesia is a method of postoperative analgesia that was developed by Kvalheim and Reiestad in 1984. The main indication is postoperative pain after unilateral thoracic and upper abdominal surgery. Many authors report good analgesic effects and better postoperative lung function following cholecystectomy. ⋯ The local anaesthetic of choice is bupivacaine (in concentrations of 0.25-0.75%, injection volumes of 10-40 ml, with or without epinephrine, applied as bolus or infusion), but others, such as lidocaine or morphine, are also being tested. Risks involved in this method are pneumothorax when the catheter is placed blind and the systemic toxicity of the local anaesthetic. This review provides information on the mechanism of action, the technique, the clinical use to date and possible risks.