Articles: patients.
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Epidural blocks (caudal, lumbar or thoracic) are of common use in paediatric patients for special procedures such as open fundoplication as well as for postoperative analgesia. However, because neonates and infants have lower metabolic capacities and specific anatomy as compared to adults, the dose of local anaesthetics and the way of their administration need careful attention. ⋯ Pharmacokinetic studies allowing safer dosing, especially with ropivacaine have recently been published. New techniques of thoracic epidural with puncture at the lumbar level are also proposed. However, all these new techniques need to pass the test of time.
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The alpha(2)-adrenoceptor agonist clonidine is one of the most widely investigated substances in anaesthesia and pain therapy. Recently, numerous experimental and clinical studies have allowed a better understanding of its underlying mechanisms of action and interactions with other analgesic drugs. ⋯ During the past decade clonidine has been investigated as an adjuvant for general and regional anaesthesia and in the postoperative period. There is no doubt that clonidine improves analgesia after systemic, spinal or peripheral opioids, and prolongs the analgesic action of most local anaesthetics. The side-effects of usual doses of clonidine are predictable. Given the clinical experience of an increasing number of hospitals, clonidine should no longer be considered an experimental drug, but a useful addendum to the pharmacological armamentarium.
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Among the chronic pain problems, pain emanating from cervical and lumbar regions, independently or in combination, constitutes a significant and frequently encountered problem in interventional pain management practices. This study was designed to test the assumption that patients presenting with chronic low back pain of lumbar facet joint origin may also present with chronic neck pain of facet joint origin. ⋯ The results showed prevalence of cervical facet joint pain in 67% of the patients with a false-positive rate of 63% with a single block, whereas the prevalence of lumbar facet joint pain was seen in 40% of the patients with a 30% false-positive rate with a single block in patients presenting with chronic low back and neck pain. There was also significant correlation noted with 94% of the patients with confirmed lumbar facet joint pain also presenting with cervical facet joint pain.
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Semin Respir Crit Care Med · Oct 2002
Pneumonia complicating the acute respiratory distress syndrome.
Ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) complicating the course of acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) is one of the most challenging diagnostic and treatment dilemmas in critical care medicine. The VAP incidence rate ranges from 37 to 60% in ARDS patients, significantly greater than for other causes of respiratory failure. Although the normal risk factors for VAP are the same in ARDS patients, multiple aspects of the underlying disease and its management increase the risk compared with non-ARDS patients. ⋯ The multilobar but predominantly lower lobe pattern of pneumonia in ARDS makes use of quantitative cultures of lower respiratory secretions (sampled by various techniques) very accurate to confirm the presence of pneumonia. VAP in ARDS patients is usually late-onset and therefore caused by highly antibiotic-resistant microorganisms. Somewhat surprisingly, the mortality of ARDS patients with VAP is not significantly greater than that of ARDS patients without VAP, although subsequent duration of mechanical ventilation is consistently prolonged in patients with VAP.
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Major complications after intracranial surgery occur in 13-27% of patients. These complications may have multiple causes, but a body of arguments suggests that the haemodynamic and metabolic changes of anaesthesia recovery may be responsible for intracranial complications. The aim of this review is to explain the rationale of this hypothesis and analyse the recent studies relevant to neuroanaesthesia recovery. ⋯ Pain, hypothermia, hypercapnia, hypoxia, hypoosmolality, hypertension, and anaemia should be avoided during emergence. Early emergence is associated with minimal haemodynamic and metabolic changes. If there is any doubt as to whether the patient should be extubated in the operating room, a gradual emergence in the intensive care unit makes it possible to decide whether or not extubation can be performed safely.