Articles: anesthetics.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial
Effect of gravity on the spread of extradural anaesthesia for caesarean section.
The effect of gravity on the spread of extradural anaesthesia was evaluated in a series of parturients undergoing elective Caesarean section. Following placement of an extradural catheter, 25 patients were placed 30-40 degrees head-up for 20 min during the administration of the local anaesthetic drug; 25 additional patients remained supine during injection. ⋯ There were no differences in the rate of onset of sacral blockade or in the extent of neural blockade between the two groups. The semi-upright position was not necessary to ensure adequate sacral anaesthesia for Caesarean section.
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Z Orthop Ihre Grenzgeb · Mar 1987
[Percutaneous lumbar facet denervation. Indications and significance in chronic backache].
The lumber facet joints have been established as a source of low back pain which may radiate to the leg. Because there are no reliable clinical signs which confirm the diagnosis injections of an anaesthetic agent into the joints are necessary. Therapeutically a percutaneous radiofrequency destruction of the medial branches of lumbar dorsal rami may relieve such pain. Success rate, however, is depending on a careful selection of patients.
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At present, the most widely used inhalational anaesthetics are the halogenated, inflammable vapours halothane, enflurane, isoflurane and the gas nitrous oxide. The anaesthetic effect of these agents is related to their tension or partial pressure in the brain, represented at equilibrium by the alveolar concentration. The minimum alveolar concentration for a specific agent is remarkably constant between individuals. ⋯ Sevoflurane is an experimental ether vapour: induction and recovery is fast and pleasant. It is metabolised to the same extent as enflurane and subnephrotoxic concentrations of inorganic fluoride may result. Sevoflurane has fewer respiratory and cardiovascular depressant effects than halothane and may be a future alternative for paediatric anaesthesia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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The respiratory effects of sevoflurane were studied in seven patients and compared with values obtained in another seven patients anesthetized with halothane. Resting ventilation, resting PaCO2, and ventilatory response to CO2 were measured awake and at 1.1 and 1.4 MAC levels of both anesthetic agents. ⋯ At 1.1 MAC, sevoflurane produced almost the same degree of respiratory depression as halothane. At 1.4 MAC, sevoflurane produced more profound respiratory depression than halothane.
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Comparative Study
Differential nerve blockade: esters v. amides and the influence of pKa.
The in vitro sensitivities to local anaesthetic blockade of A, B and C fibres in rabbit vagus nerves were examined using a series of structurally similar amide agents, which varied in lipid solubility and anaesthetic potency. The actions of these drugs were compared with one another, and with those of a series of amino-ester local anaesthetics studied previously. The results demonstrated that A fibres are the most, and C fibres the least, sensitive to blockade by local anaesthetic agents. ⋯ As the latter increased, so did the rate of A fibre blockade. Combining the results of the two studies suggests that an agent of low lipid solubility and high pKa might be used to produce differential C fibre blockade. Comparison of the results obtained with the two different classes of drug indicates that the ester structure may have an inherently more potent action than the amide.