Articles: patients.
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This study evaluated the efficacy of sphenopalatine ganglion pulsed radiofrequency (SPG-PRF) treatment in patients suffering from chronic head and face pain. Thirty patients were observed from 4 to 52 months after PRF treatment. The primary efficacy measures were the reduction in oral medication use, including opioids, time-to-next-treatment modality for presenting symptoms, duration of pain relief, and the presence of residual symptoms. ⋯ None of the patients developed significant infection, bleeding, hematoma formation, dysesthesia, or numbness of palate, maxilla, or posterior pharynx. A large-scale study of SPG-PRF for the treatment of face and head pain has not been previously reported. Our results suggest that a prospective, randomized, controlled trial study to confirm efficacy and safety of this novel treatment for chronic head and face pain is justified.
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In 2004, two large randomised multi-centre Australian clinical trials provided new information concerning optimal resuscitation for patients with traumatic brain injury (TBI). One examined hypertonic saline (HTS) and the other, albumin versus saline.( )For the first time in a randomised trial, hypertonic saline was tested for pre-hospital resuscitation of hypotensive patients with traumatic brain injury, and for the first time a resuscitation fluid trial measured long term neurological function as the primary outcome. Despite many potential advantages which may have much greater relevance in the hospital setting, in the paramedic based VICn trauma system, HTS did not improve neurological outcome compared to conventional pre-hospital fluid protocols. ⋯ Intriguingly however, the SAFE study also reported that within a subgroup of 492 patients with TBI, 28 day survival was superior in patients receiving saline. This subgroup result was not considered definitive, but a post hoc examination of the TBI patients currently in progress by the SAFE investigators, is expected to provide further guidance for clinicians. In the meanwhile, and until more high quality data is available, many clinicians are likely to prefer crystalloid resuscitation for trauma patients, and especially for trauma patients with brain injury.
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A reliable emergency department (ED) workload measurement tool would provide a method of quantifying clinical productivity for performance evaluation and physician incentive programs; it would enable health administrators to measure ED outputs; and it could provide the basis for an equitable formula to estimate ED physician staffing requirements. Our objectives were to identify predictors that correlate with physician time needed to treat patients and to develop a multivariable model to predict physician workload. ⋯ This study clarifies important determinants of emergency physician workload. If validated in other settings, the predictive formula derived and internally validated here is a potential alternative to current simplistic models based solely on patient volume and perceived acuity. An evidence-based workload estimation tool like that described here could facilitate ED productivity measurement, benchmarking, physician performance evaluation, and provide the substrate for an equitable formula to estimate ED physician staffing requirements.
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Curr Opin Anaesthesiol · Aug 2005
Anaesthetics and the rate corrected interval: learning from droperidol?
Understanding of the long QT syndrome continues to evolve. Anaesthesia in patients with untreated long QT syndrome carries a risk of perioperative malignant ventricular arrhythmias. Genotypically susceptible individuals may have a normal rate-corrected QT interval and present with torsade de pointes intraoperatively. The likelihood of arrhythmias can be reduced by careful preoperative preparation. Perioperative disturbances in physiological homeostasis and drugs administered can prolong the rate-corrected QT interval. ⋯ Droperidol can lead to serious cardiac arrhythmias from QT prolongation. Recent advances in the pathophysiology of congenital and acquired long QT syndrome are reviewed. Preclinical tests assessing potential new drugs for QT prolongation are briefly discussed. Considerations for the management of these patients during perioperative phases are explored. The optimal treatment of the long QT syndrome is presented along with a glimpse into future possibilities in this field.
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Cannabinoids have been known for their analgesic, anxiolytic, antiemetic and antispastic properties for many centuries. Since an endogenous cannabinoid system has been identified in the past two decades, cannabinoids have also become the focus of interest in western medicine. This review summarizes preclinical and clinical studies on the role of the endocannabinoid system and exogenous cannabinoids in anaesthesia and pain management. ⋯ In general, the results of the very few well-conducted clinical trials often diverge from the highly interesting and promising findings of preclinical studies. Taken together, the most recent preclinical and clinical data suggest that cannabinoids should be applied as low-dose co-analgesics to inhibit neuroplasticity and central sensitization rather than as analgesics in acute pain.