Articles: general-anesthesia.
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Ann R Coll Surg Engl · Mar 1980
Frequency of atopy, allergy, and previous general anaesthesia in surgical specialties.
This paper reports part of a large survey of atopy, allergy, and previous anaesthesia in 10 000 preanaesthetic patients. The occurrence of these risk factors in the various surgical specialties has been assessed. Obstetric patients have a significantly higher frequency of atopy and allergy than the total female population studied. Among males cardiothoracic patients are the only group to have a significantly higher frequency of atopy and allergy than the overall figure for their sex.
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Minerva anestesiologica · Feb 1980
[Delivery under general anesthesia with the sequence of althesin and lysine acetylsalicylate; a clinical contribution].
Personal experience in the use of Althesin in painless childbirth is reported. The anaesthetic is held to have no effect on the foetus and the technique using Althesin and acetylsalicylate of lysine is considered the correct one. If properly applied, it offers the foetus complete wellbeing during labour and enables the mother to overcome the psychophysical stress of an event which is too often accepted with inherited feelings of ancestral fear.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Feb 1980
Clinical characteristics of long-term succinylcholine neuromuscular blockade during balanced anesthesia.
Thumb adductor twitch response to train-of-four (2 Hz for 2 seconds) stimulation of the ulnar nerve was used to assess the clinical characteristics of long-term neuromuscular blockade induced with continuous infusion of succinylcholine during balanced (N2O-O2-narcotic-thiopental) anesthesia. Twitch depression of 80 to 90% was maintained for 86 to 365 minutes by continuous infusion of succinylcholine at 86 +/- 5(SEM) micrograms/kg/min. Of 32 patients, 24 developed phase II block, defined as a train-of-four ratio of less than 50%. ⋯ Of 24 patients who developed phase II block, 50% recovered spontaneously at a rate comparable to the recovery rate from a phase I block. The other 50% manifested prolonged recovery of neuromuscular function. After observing spontaneous recovery in these patients for 31 +/- 5(SEM) minutes, successful antagonism of residual phase II block with anticholinesterase agents was achieved.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Comparison of the effects of spinal anaesthesia and general anaesthesia on postoperative oxygenation and perioperative mortality.
One hundred patients presenting for surgical treatment of fractured neck of femur were allocated to receive either spinal (SAB) or general (GA) anaesthesia. Before operation, the mean PaO2 was 9.04 kPa. ⋯ Eight patients (15.7%) in GA group and five patients (10.2%) in SAB group died within 4 weeks of surgery. The difference was not statistically significant.