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Showing papers in "Survey of Anesthesiology in 1993"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Complications, length of hospitalization, and charges were higher for patients who had had a spinal arthrodesis than for those who had not, and operations for conditions other than a herniated disc were associated with more complications and greater use of resources than were operations for removal of a hernia.
Abstract: We examined the rates of postoperative complications and mortality, as recorded in a hospital discharge registry for the State of Washington for the years 1986 through 1988, for patients who had had an operation on the lumbar spine. When patients who had had a malignant lesion, infection, or fracture are excluded, there were 18,122 hospitalizations for procedures on the lumbar spine, 84 per cent of which involved a herniated disc or spinal stenosis. The rates of morbidity and mortality during hospitalization, as well as the hospital charges, increased with the ages of the patients. The rate of complications was 18 per cent for patients who were seventy-five years or older. Nearly 7 per cent of patients who were seventy-five years old or more were discharged to nursing homes. Complications were most frequent among patients who had spinal stenosis, but multivariate analysis suggested that the complications associated with procedures for this condition were primarily related to the patient's age and the type of procedure. Complications, length of hospitalization, and charges were higher for patients who had had a spinal arthrodesis than for those who had not. Over-all, operations for conditions other than a herniated disc were associated with more complications and greater use of resources, particularly when arthrodesis was performed, than were operations for removal of a herniated disc. No data on symptoms or functional results were available.

262 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using a shorter version of the questionnaire used in this study, peer ratings provide a practical method to assess clinical performance in areas such as humanistic qualities and communication skills that are difficult to assess with other measures.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE To assess the feasibility and measurement characteristics of ratings completed by professional associates to evaluate the performance of practicing physicians. DESIGN The clinical performance of physicians was evaluated using written questionnaires mailed to professional associates (physicians and nurses). Physician-associates were randomly selected from lists provided by both the subjects and medical supervisors, and detailed information was collected concerning the professional and social relationships between the associate and the subject. Responses were analyzed to determine factors that affect ratings and measurement characteristics of peer ratings. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS Physician-subjects were selected from among practicing internists in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania who received American Board of Internal Medicine certification 5 to 15 years previously. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE Physician performance as assessed by peers. RESULTS Peer ratings are not biased substantially by the method of selection of the peers or the relationship between the rater and the subject. Factor analyses suggest a two-dimensional conceptualization of clinical skills: one factor represents cognitive and clinical management skills and the other factor represents humanistic qualities and management of psychosocial aspects of illness. Ratings from 11 peer physicians are needed to provide a reliable assessment in these two areas. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest that it is feasible to obtain assessments from professional associates of practicing physicians in areas such as clinical skills, humanistic qualities, and communication skills. Using a shorter version of the questionnaire used in this study, peer ratings provide a practical method to assess clinical performance in areas such as humanistic qualities and communication skills that are difficult to assess with other measures.

161 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Metabolism of both erythromycin and midazolam by the same cytochrome P450IIIA isozyme may explain the observed pharmacokinetic interaction.
Abstract: Interaction between erythromycin and midazolam was investigated in two double-blind, randomized, crossover studies. In the first study, 12 healthy volunteers were given 500 mg erythromycin three times a day or placebo for 1 week. On the sixth day, the subjects ingested 15 mg midazolam. In the second study, midazolam (0.05 mg/kg) was given intravenously to six of the same subjects, after similar pretreatments. Plasma samples were collected, and psychomotor performance was measured. Erythromycin increased the area under the midazolam concentration-time curve after oral intake more than four times (p < 0.001) and reduced clearance of intravenously administered midazolam by 54% (p < 0.05). In psychomotor tests (e.g., saccadic eye movements), the interaction between erythromycin and orally administered midazolam was statistically significant (p < 0.05) from 15 minutes to 6 hours. Metabolism of both erythromycin and midazolam by the same cytochrome P450IIIA isozyme may explain the observed pharmacokinetic interaction. Prescription of midazolam for patients receiving erythromycin should be avoided or the dose of midazolam should be reduced by 50% to 75%.

153 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors carried out two randomized, double-blind, crossover studies in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy, comparing amitriptyline with the relatively selective blocker of norepinephrine reuptake desipramine in 38 patients, and comparing the selective blocker with placebo in 46 patients.
Abstract: Background. Amitriptyline reduces the pain caused by peripheral-nerve disease, but treatment is often limited by side effects related to the drug's many pharmacologic actions. Selective agents might be safer and more effective. Methods. We carried out two randomized, double-blind, crossover studies in patients with painful diabetic neuropathy, comparing amitriptyline with the relatively selective blocker of norepinephrine reuptake desipramine in 38 patients, and comparing the selective blocker of serotonin reuptake fluoxetine with placebo in 46 patients. Fifty-seven patients were randomly assigned to a study as well as to the order of treatment, permitting comparison among all three drugs and placebo as the first treatment. The patients rated the degree of pain present each day using verbal descriptors, and they also assessed the extent of pain relief globally at the end of each treatment period. Results. After individual dose titration, the mean daily doses of the drugs were as follows: amitript...

147 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that low levels of inhaled gaseous NO, or an aerosolized NO-releasing compound are potent bronchodilators in guinea pigs.
Abstract: The effects of inhaling nitric oxide (NO) on airway mechanics were studied in anesthetized and mechanically ventilated guinea pigs. In animals without induced bronchoconstriction, breathing 300 ppm NO decreased baseline pulmonary resistance (RL) from 0.138 +/- 0.004 (mean +/- SE) to 0.125 +/- 0.002 cmH2O/ml.s (P less than 0.05). When an intravenous infusion of methacholine (3.5-12 micrograms/kg.min) was used to increase RL from 0.143 +/- 0.008 to 0.474 +/- 0.041 cmH2O/ml.s (P less than 0.05), inhalation of 5-300 ppm NO-containing gas mixtures produced a dose-related, rapid, consistent, and reversible reduction of RL and an increase of dynamic lung compliance. The onset of bronchodilation was rapid, beginning within 30 s after commencing inhalation. An inhaled NO concentration of 15.0 +/- 2.1 ppm was required to reduce RL by 50% of the induced bronchoconstriction. Inhalation of 100 ppm NO for 1 h did not produce tolerance to its bronchodilator effect nor did it induce substantial methemoglobinemia (less than 2%). The bronchodilating effects of NO were additive with the effects of inhaled terbutaline, irrespective of the sequence of NO and terbutaline administration. Inhaling aerosol generated from S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine also induced a rapid and profound decrease of RL from 0.453 +/- 0.022 to 0.287 +/- 0.022 cmH2O/ml.s, which lasted for over 15 min in guinea pigs broncho-constricted with methacholine. Our results indicate that low levels of inhaled gaseous NO, or an aerosolized NO-releasing compound are potent bronchodilators in guinea pigs.

133 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, preterm infants of less than 34 weeks gestation who were selected on the basis of serial cranial ultrasonographic findings during their nursery course had repeated neurologic and developmental examinations during late infancy and early childhood that established the presence or absence of spastic forms of cerebral palsy.
Abstract: Surviving preterm infants of less than 34 weeks9 gestation who were selected on the basis of serial cranial ultrasonographic findings during their nursery course had repeated neurologic and developmental examinations during late infancy and early childhood that established the presence (n = 46) or absence (n = 205) of spastic forms of cerebral palsy. Of the 205 infants without cerebral palsy, 22 scored abnormally low on standardized developmental testing during early childhood. The need for mechanical ventilation beginning on the first day of life (n = 92) was significantly related to gestational age, birth weight, Apgar scores, patent ductus arteriosus, grade III/IV intracranial hemorrhage, large periventricular cysts, and the development of cerebral palsy. In the 192 mechanically ventilated infants, vaginal bleeding during the third trimester, low Apgar scores, and maximally low Pco2 values during the first 3 days of life were significantly related to large periventricular cysts (n = 41) and cerebral palsy (n = 43), but not to developmental delay in the absence of cerebral palsy (n = 18). The severity of intracranial hemorrhage in mechanically ventilated infants was significantly associated with gestational age and maximally low measurements of Pco2 and pH, but not with Apgar scores or maximally low measurements of Po2. Logistic regression analyses controlling for possible confounding variables disclosed that Pco2 values of less than 17 mm Hg during the first 3 days of life in mechanically ventilated infants were associated with a significantly increased risk of moderate to severe periventricular echodensity, large periventricular cysts, grade III/IV intracranial hemorrhage, and cerebral palsy. Neurosonographic abnormalities were highly predictive of cerebral palsy independent of Pco2 measurements. However, neither hypocarbia nor neurosonographic abnormalities were associated with a significantly increased risk of developmental delay in the absence of cerebral palsy. In this preterm infant population, therefore, the risk factors for developmental delay differed from those predictive of spastic forms of cerebral palsy. Of the 57 ventilated preterm infants who were exposed to a maximally low Pco2 of less than 20 mm Hg at least once during the first 3 days of life, 21 developed large periventricular cysts or cerebral palsy or both. Those results suggest that prenatal and neonatal factors including the need for mechanical ventilation beginning on the first day of life and marked hypocarbia during the first 3 postnatal days are associated with an increased risk of damage to the periventricular white matter of some preterm infants. However, a causal relationship between hypocarbia and brain damage in preterm infants remains unproven.

132 citations




Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study evaluated whether an alternative protocol to "routine" management would favorably affect the development or resolution of pulmonary edema per se as the primary outcome variable as well as other relevant outcome variables to assess clinical significance.
Abstract: ICU days. AM REV RESPIR DIS 1992; 145:990-998 Introduction Theoretically and experimentally, fluid balance can affect the development, accumulation, and resolution of severe pulmonary edema (1-6). Even so, other concerns are often invoked as more important in the clinical setting, leading to fluid management strategies that could be counterproductive to the resolution of pulmonary edema. For instance, in hypotensive patients, clinicians often try to balance the potential benefits of intravascular volume expansion on cardiac and renal function against the potentially negative effect of causing or worsening pulmonary edema. Measuring the pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (WP) is usually a central feature in designing these approaches to patient care. The relative benefits or disadvantages of anyone strategy have never been tested prospectively. In a previous study (7), we reported that a strategy that emphasized intravascular volume restriction for hypotensive patients in severepulmonary edema was still safe and well tolerated, despite \"deviations\" from conventional practice. The sample size, however, was too small to detect differences in outcome. Two other recent studies (8, 9), however, neither of which was designed to prospectively study the impact of fluid balance, nevertheless provide evidence that outcome in severe pulmonary edema can be affected by fluid management. In the present study, we evaluated whether an alternative protocol to \"routine\" management would favorably affect the development or resolution of pulmonary edema per se (as the primary outcome variable) as well as other relevant outcome variables (to assess clinical significance). The main feature of this alternative approach was to use direct measurements of extravascular lung water (EVLW)instead of WP measurements to guide fluid management. These measurements were made possible by the development of the thermal-indocyanine green dye double-indicator dilution method as a bedside technique (10, 11). The data

117 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, patients with chronic low back pain were randomly assigned to receive either facet joint injection or facet nerve block, using local anaesthetic and steroid, and there was no significant difference in the immediate response.
Abstract: Eighty-six patients with refractory chronic low back pain were randomly assigned to receive either facet joint injection or facet nerve block, using local anaesthetic and steroid. There was no significant difference in the immediate response. The duration of response after facet joint injection was marginally longer than after facet nerve block (P < 0.05 1 month after infiltration), but for both groups the response was usually short-lived; by 3 months only 2 patients continued to report complete pain relief. Patients who had complained of pain for more than 7 years were more likely to report good or excellent pain relief than those with a shorter history (P < 0.005), but no other clinical feature was of value in predicting the response to infiltration. Facet joint injections and facet nerve blocks may be of equal value as diagnostic tests, but neither is a satisfactory treatment for chronic back pain.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The findings indicate that the powerful effects of CO2 on the cerebral circulation are mediated by arginine-derived EDRF/NO, an important molecular signal whose actions may also include the regulation cerebral circulation.
Abstract: The endothelium-derived relaxing factor (EDRF), probably nitric oxide (NO) or a closely related compound (EDRF/NO), is a potent vasodilator that appears to regulate vascular tone in several vascular beds. I have investigated whether EDRF/NO is also involved in the regulation of the cerebral circulation--in particular, whether EDRF/NO participates in the increases in cerebral blood flow elicited by hypercapnia. Rats were anesthetized with halothane, 1-2% (vol/vol), paralyzed, and artificially ventilated. Arterial pressure was monitored and blood gases were controlled. Cerebral blood flow was continuously monitored through a cranial window over the sensory cortex by a laser-Doppler probe. The window was superfused with Ringer's solution (pH 7.3-7.4 at 37 degrees C). During superfusion with Ringer's solution, hypercapnia (PCO2 = 55.8 +/- 0.8 mmHg) increased cerebral blood flow by 121 +/- 6% (n = 27; P less than 0.001; analysis of variance). Topical superfusion with the NO synthase inhibitors N omega-nitro-L-arginine (1 mM) attenuated the cerebrovasodilation by 93 +/- 6% (n = 8). In contrast, the vasodilation elicited by topical papaverine (1 mM) was not affected by N omega-nitro-L-arginine (n = 10). Application of N omega-nitro-D-arginine (1 mM) did not affect the cerebrovasodilation elicited by hypercapnia (P greater than 0.05; n = 8). N omega-Methyl-L-arginine (1 mM) attenuated the cerebrovasodilation elicited by hypercapnia by 44 +/- 4% (n = 8; P less than 0.001), an effect completely reversed by coapplication of L-arginine (10 mM; P greater than 0.05; n = 13). These findings indicate that the powerful effects of CO2 on the cerebral circulation are mediated by arginine-derived EDRF/NO. EDRF/NO is an important molecular signal whose actions may also include the regulation cerebral circulation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A correlation between anti-HCV antibody activity, hepatitis C virus replication, and the development of chronic liver disease is suggested.
Abstract: One hundred and thirty-five patients who developed non-A, non-B post-transfusion hepatitis mostly after cardiac surgery, were followed for a mean (±S.D.) of 90±41 months (range: 13–180) to evaluate clinical and histological outcome. Thirty-one cases resolved within 12 months, while 104 (77%) progressed to chronicity. Twenty-one of 65 (32%) biopsied patients developed cirrhosis at the end of the follow-up, and one further progressed to hepatocellular carcinoma. One patient had a complete histological remission (1%). The remaining cases had chronic active (37%), chronic persistent (27%) or chronic lobular hepatitis (3%). About half of the cases with cirrhosis developed portal hypertension, and three of these died due to esophageal varices hemorrhage, one due to liver failure, and one due to hepatocellular carcinoma. Out of 26 patients with the initial histologic diagnosis of chronic hepatitis that were rebiopsied during follow-up, 13 (50%) progressed to cirrhosis. These patients were significantly older than patients who did not develop cirrhosis (mean age 57 and 45 years respectively; p During acute hepatitis anti-HCV was positive in all but one of the 114 patients tested. Percentages were similar for patients who recovered (95%) and those who developed chronic hepatitis (100%). However, during follow-up, 71% of the 1st generation and 21% of the 2nd generation ELISA test patients with acute resolved hepatitis became anti-HCV negative, while the same figures in chronic cases were only 8.5% ( p p =0.012). This suggests a correlation between anti-HCV antibody activity, hepatitis C virus replication, and the development of chronic liver disease.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The high mortality rate within the first 8 weeks after the date of hip fracture was mainly attributed to the hip fracture, and male sex, concomitant illnesses and in-hospital complications are negative determinants of survival.
Abstract: The mortality rate and causes of death after a hip fracture were studied in 493 consecutive patients with a hip fracture. All patients were treated in three hospitals in Utrecht, The Netherlands. The mortality rate following hip fractures is high and age dependent. Forty-five patients, 38 women and 7 men, died during the period of hospitalization (9.1%). One year after the date of hip fracture 23.6% of the women had died and 33.0% of the men. Four years after the date of hip fracture the mortality rates in women and men were 44.4% and 55.3%, respectively. Male sex, concomitant illnesses and in-hospital complications are negative determinants of survival. The in-hospital mortality was due to: cerebrovascular accident (n = 7), cardiac decompensation (n = 12), myocardial infarction (n = 4), pulmonary infection (n = 6), intestinal bleeding (n = 1) and sepsis (n = 5). From the registration of death causes we learned that 54 deaths were directly due to the hip fracture, 4 due to bed sores, 34 due to infectious diseases, 62 due to cardiovascular disease, 22 due to cerebrovascular accidents, 14 due to diabetes mellitus, and 33 due to neoplasm. The high mortality rate within the first 8 weeks after the date of hip fracture was mainly attributed to the hip fracture.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A multimodality protocol appears to be effective in reducing the risk of spinal cord injury during thoracoabdominal aortic replacement.
Abstract: The records of 150 consecutive patients undergoing thoracoabdominal aortic replacement from 1980 to 1991 were retrospectively reviewed. There were 89 men and 61 women; mean age was 67.8 years (range: 33 to 88 years). Since June 1989, a multimodality prospective perioperative protocol was used to reduce the risk of spinal cord dysfunction. Ischemia is minimized by complete intercostal reimplantation whenever possible, cerebrospinal fluid drainage, and maintenance of proximal hypertension during cross-clamping. Spinal cord metabolism is reduced by moderate hypothermia, high-dose barbiturates, and avoidance of hyperglycemia. Reperfusion injury is minimized by the use of mannitol, steroids, and calcium channel blockers. Ninety-seven percent of patients survived long enough for evaluation of their neurologic function. Spinal cord dysfunction was reduced from 6 of 108 (6%) in the preprotocol group to 0 of 42 in the protocol group (0%) (p less than 0.01). The overall 30-day operative mortality was not significantly different between the groups (9% versus 12%, p = NS). A multimodality protocol appears to be effective in reducing the risk of spinal cord injury during thoracoabdominal aortic replacement.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The morbidity and mortality risks were comparable between total pancreatectomy and a Whipple's procedure and between biliary and a double bypass.
Abstract: Objective To analyze the morbidity and mortality after radical and palliative pancreatic cancer surgery in Norway, especially the risk factors. Summary background data A prospective multicenter study between 1984-1987 including only histologically or cytologically verified adenocarcinoma of the pancreas (N = 442) or the papilla of Vater (N = 30); 84 patients (19%) with pancreatic carcinoma and 24 patients (80%) with papilla carcinoma underwent radical operations. A palliative procedure was performed in 252 patients (53%). Methods Clinical data, surgical procedures and the following morbidity and mortality were recorded on standardized forms. The risk factors were analyzed by a logistic multiple regression model. Results The morbidity, reoperation, and mortality rates were 43, 18, and 11% after radical surgery and 23, 4, and 14% after palliative surgery. Karnofsky's index was the sole independent risk factor for death after radical surgery. Splenectomy, age, and TNM stage influenced morbidity. Diabetes, Karnofsky's index, and liver metastases were risk factors in palliative surgery. Conclusions The morbidity and mortality risks were comparable between total pancreatectomy and a Whipple's procedure and between biliary and a double bypass. Preoperative biliary drainage had no impact on the risks and may be abandoned. High age is a relative and a low Karnofsky's index an absolute contraindication for radical surgery. Nonsurgical palliation of jaundice should be considered according to the presence of independent risk factors.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The production of sevoflurane degradation products was evaluated using a low-flow anesthetic technique in patients receiving sev of lurane anesthesia in excess of 3 h and exhalation concentrations of compound A were less than inhalation concentrations, suggesting patient uptake.
Abstract: Sevoflurane, a new inhalational anesthetic agent has been shown to produce degradation products upon interaction with CO2 absorbants. Quantification of these sevoflurane degradation products during low-flow or closed circuit anesthesia in patients has not been well evaluated. The production of sevoflurane degradation products was evaluated using a low-flow anesthetic technique in patients receiving sevoflurane anesthesia in excess of 3 h. Sevoflurane anesthesia was administered to 16 patients using a circle absorption system with O2 flow of 500 ml/min and average N2O flow of 273 ml/min. Preoperative and postoperative hepatic and renal function studies were performed. Gas samples were obtained from the inhalation and exhalation limbs of the anesthetic circuit for degradation product analysis and analyzed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry for four degradation products. The first eight patients received sevoflurane anesthesia using soda lime, and the following eight patients received anesthesia using baralyme as the CO2 absorbant. CO2 absorbant temperatures were measured during anesthesia. Of the degradation products analyzed, only one compound [fluoromethyl-2, 2-difluoro-1-(trifluoromethyl) vinyl ether], designated compound A, was detectable. Concentrations of compound A increased during the first 4 h of anesthesia with soda lime and baralyme and declined between 4 and 5 h when baralyme was used. Mean maximum inhalation concentration of compound A using baralyme was 20.28 +/- 8.6 ppm (mean +/- SEM) compared to 8.16 +/- 2.67 ppm obtained with soda lime, a difference that did not reach statistical significance. A single patient achieved a maximal concentration of 60.78 ppm during low-flow anesthesia with baralyme. Exhalation concentrations of compound A were less than inhalation concentrations, suggesting patient uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether autonomic changes occurring during sleep, particularly rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, contribute to the initiation of such events and found that the early hours of the morning after awakening are associated with an increased frequency of events such as myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke.
Abstract: Background The early hours of the morning after awakening are associated with an increased frequency of events such as myocardial infarction and ischemic stroke. The triggering mechanisms for these events are not clear. We investigated whether autonomic changes occurring during sleep, particularly rapid-eye-movement (REM) sleep, contribute to the initiation of such events. Methods We measured blood pressure, heart rate, and sympathetic-nerve activity (using microneurography, which provides direct measurements of efferent sympathetic-nerve activity related to muscle blood vessels) in eight normal subjects while they were awake and while in the five stages of sleep. Results The mean (±SE) amplitude of bursts of sympathetic-nerve activity and levels of blood pressure and heart rate declined significantly (P<0.001), from 100 ±9 percent, 90 ±4 mm Hg, and 64 ±2 beats per minute, respectively, during wakefulness to 41 ±9 percent, 80 ±4 mm Hg, and 59 ±2 beats per minute, respectively, during stage 4 of non-REM sl...

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the airway irritation produced by the four anaesthetic agents: halothane, enflurane, isoflurane and sevofluranane at two concentrations, equivalent to one and two MACs, was evaluated.
Abstract: Eleven male volunteers were studied to compare the airway irritation produced by the four anaesthetic agents: halothane, enflurane, isoflurane and sevoflurane at two concentrations, equivalent to one and two MAC. Tidal volume, respiratory frequency and functional residual capacity changes induced by 15 sec inhalation of the anaesthetics were measured using respiratory inductive plethysmograph. Appearance of the cough reflex was also observed. The order of subjective airway irritation was evaluated by the volunteers. Inhalation of the anaesthetic agents induced a decrease in tidal volume, increase in respiratory frequency and decrease in functional residual capacity. Significant changes were considered to have occurred if tidal volume and respiratory frequency changed by more than 30% from the resting values for at least ten seconds, or if functional residual capacity changed by more than 30% of the value at resting tidal volume, for at least ten seconds. Each change was induced most frequently by isoflurane followed by enflurane, halothane and, least frequently, by sevoflurane. The orders of appearance of the cough reflex and of subjective airway irritation were similar. Sevoflurane did not elicit a cough reflex. It is concluded that sevoflurane was the least irritant anaesthetic and is considered to be the most suitable for inhalational induction of anaesthesia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Early administration of opiate analgesia to patients with acute abdominal pain can greatly reduce their pain and this does not interfere with diagnosis, which may even be facilitated despite a reduction in the severity of physical signs.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES--(a) to determine the efficacy of papaveretum in treating pain when administered early to patients presenting with acute abdominal pain and (b) to assess its effect on subsequent diagnosis and management. DESIGN--Prospective, randomised, placebo controlled study. SETTING--Walsgrave Hospital, Coventry. SUBJECTS--100 consecutive patients with clinically significant abdominal pain who were admitted as emergencies to a surgical firm. INTERVENTIONS--Intramuscular injection of up to 20 mg papaveretum or an equivalent volume of saline. OUTCOME MEASURES--Pain and tenderness scores, assessment of patient comfort, accuracy of diagnosis, and management decisions. RESULTS--Median pain and tenderness scores were lower after papaveretum (pain score 8.3 in control group and 3.1 in treatment group, p < 0.0001; tenderness score 8.1 in control group and 5.1 in treatment group, p < 0.0001). Forty eight patients were deemed to be comfortable after papaveretum compared with nine after saline. Incorrect diagnoses and management decisions applied to two patients after papaveretum compared with nine patients after saline. CONCLUSION--Early administration of opiate analgesia to patients with acute abdominal pain can greatly reduce their pain. This does not interfere with diagnosis, which may even be facilitated despite a reduction in the severity of physical signs. These patients should not be denied effective treatment.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that the combination of long-acting anesthetic agents and corticosteroids can reduce postoperative discomfort and subsequently the length of postoperative hospital stay.
Abstract: The introduction of microdiscectomy to lumbar spine surgery has resulted in a significant decrease in postoperative pain and length of hospital stay. Intraoperative application of long-acting local anesthetic agents has been used for many general and neurosurgical procedures for the management of postoperative pain. In addition, many surgeons routinely use intraoperative corticosteroids during lumbar discectomy to reduce traumatic nerve root inflammation. However, the efficacy of intraoperative long-acting local anesthetic agents and corticosteroids for reduction of postoperative discomfort has not been reported for lumbar discectomy. This study evaluated 32 patients at a university-based Veterans Administration hospital undergoing lumbar microdiscectomy. All 32 patients presented with radicular symptoms and had radiographic confirmation of a herniated nucleus pulposus. These patients were divided into three groups. Group 1 (12 patients) received 160 mg intramuscular Depo-Medrol (methylprednisolone acetate) and 250 mg intravenous Solu-Medrol (methyl-prednisolone sodium succinate) at the start of the operation. A macerated fat graft soaked in 80 mg Depo-Medrol was placed over the affected nerve root following discectomy. In addition, 30 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine was infiltrated into the paraspinal musculature at skin incision and during closure. Group 2 (10 patients) received 30 ml of 0.25% bupivacaine infiltrated into the paraspinal musculature at skin incision and at closure. In this group of patients, a saline-soaked fat graft was placed over the affected nerve root. Group 3 (10 patients) acted as a control group, undergoing lumbar microdiscectomy without corticosteroids or bupivacaine. Patients receiving bupivacaine and corticosteroids (Group 1) had a statistically significantly shorter hospital stay (1.4 days) compared to the control group (4.0 days) (p = 0.0004, Mann-Whitney U-test). Patients in Group 1 required less postoperative narcotic analgesia than the other groups. Finally, a larger percentage of patients in Group 1 reported complete relief of back and radicular pain on postoperative Day 1 compared to other groups. Postoperative complications and functional outcome were not different between the groups. These results indicate that the combination of long-acting anesthetic agents and corticosteroids can reduce postoperative discomfort and subsequently the length of postoperative hospital stay.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: If congenital heart disease and chromosomal anomalies are excluded and there is little or no evidence of left heart underdevelopment, the odds for survival will improve, and this should be taken into account when the management of these cases is planned.
Abstract: The reported mortality for prenatally detected congenital diaphragmatic hernia is high. Polyhydramnios and presentation in early pregnancy have been suggested as high-risk factors adversely affecting outcome. We retrospectively reviewed 55 cases of congenital diaphragmatic hernia diagnosed prenatally in our unit. There was an overall mortality of 73%. The mortality in cases with presentation before 25 weeks' gestation was 74%, if the cases resulting in termination of pregnancy are excluded, compared with a mortality of 60% in those seen after this gestational age. Underdevelopment of left-sided cardiac structures was found to be a helpful prognostic factor. We were unable to confirm the predictive nature of hydramnios. Associated chromosomal anomalies were found in two fetuses and major congenital heart disease in nine. Although diagnosis before 25 weeks' gestation is associated with a higher mortality than in cases detected later, it is not universally fatal. If congenital heart disease and chromosomal anomalies are excluded and there is little or no evidence of left heart underdevelopment, the odds for survival will improve. This should be taken into account when the management of these cases is planned.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The study shows that a high proportion of unsedated children are calm at induction of anaesthesia and that oral midazolam is an effective premedication in children for day-stay anaesthesia.
Abstract: The effect of oral premedication was studied in a double-blind, randomised trial of 200 children undergoing day-stay anaesthesia. Midazolam 0.25 mg/kg, midazolam 0.5 mg/kg, diazepam 0.5 mg/kg or a placebo was given orally one hour prior to anaesthesia. Patient state was assessed at nine stages, from administration of the premedication up to and including induction of anaesthesia, using a four-point behavioural scale. Patient state was also assessed postoperatively in the recovery area and the day-stay ward. There was no difference between the four groups until induction of anaesthesia. At this stage 82% of children were either asleep or awake and calm. Patients who received midazolam 0.5 mg/kg were more likely to be asleep or awake and calm at induction rather than other groups (P = 0.05). Children receiving midazolam 0.5 mg/kg or diazepam 0.5 mg/kg slept longest in the post anaesthetic recovery room (P less than 0.005), and spent most time there (P less than .005). There was no difference between groups in the length of time spent in the day-stay ward or in the number of overnight admissions. The study shows that a high proportion of unsedated children are calm at induction of anaesthesia and that oral midazolam is an effective premedication in children for day-stay anaesthesia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results confirm that CB is a reliable technique, easy to perform by beginners, and it should be stressed, however, that small infants are at increased risk of concealed BTs.
Abstract: METHODS The demographic and technical data of all the pediatric caudal blocks (CBs) performed from August 1986 to September 1989 in our teaching hospital were prospectively collected on a computerized protocol Except for 22 high-risk ex-premature infants, all CBs were performed under halothane or isoflurane anesthesia, after premedication with atropine Moreover, they were performed using local anesthetic solutions containing 1:200,000 epinephrine A total of 1100 CBs were performed in children younger than 7 years; 203 patients weighed 5 kg or less; 260, 51-10 kg; 300, 101-15 kg; and 337, more than 151 kg The CBs were also analyzed according to the anesthesiologist's experience with CB: 184 were performed by anesthesiologists who had performed fewer than 10 CBs (Group A); 210, 10-20 CBs (Group B), and 704, more than 20 CBs (Group C) RESULTS We found difficult landmarks in 112% of our patients Moreover, it was significantly more frequent (p = 00004) if the patients weighed less than 10 kg, because of poor anatomy or obesity There were 76 bloody taps (BTs, 69%); although there was a statistically insignificant trend toward a lower incidence of BTs in the 51-10-kg group, experience seemed to influence the incidence of BTs, as it decreased from 114% in Group A to 89% and 54% in Groups B and C, respectively (p less than 005) There were eight systemic reactions (ie, brisk onset of tachycardia during or shortly after the CB), which were all short-lived and responded quickly to hyperventilation with oxygen Two occurred despite repositioning the needle after a previous BT, but six occurred with no previous evidence of blood and were thus called "concealed" BTs Moreover, all occurred in children weighing 10 kg or less There was only one dural tap Only nine CBs (081%) failed to provide effective intraoperative anesthesia, and 93% of the patients left the recovery room without having required narcotic or non-narcotic analgesics CONCLUSIONS Our results confirm that CB is a reliable technique, easy to perform by beginners It should be stressed, however, that small infants are at increased risk of concealed BTs

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that mivacurium is short-acting in patients with normal pChe phenotype and normal to low-normal pChe activity, and a prolonged response to mivaccurium may, however, be expected in these patients.
Abstract: The significance of plasma cholinesterase (pChe) activity for the duration of action of mivacurium in phenotypically normal patients was evaluated in 35 patients during neurolept anaesthesia. The response to train-of-four nerve stimulation was recorded using a Myograph 2000. Ten patients with normal pChe (Group I) and five patients with decreased pChe activity (Group 2) were given a small test dose of mivacurium 0.03 mg kg-1. Mivacurium 0.1 mg kg-1 was administered following spontaneous recovery from the first dose. The mean suppression of the height of the first (T1) of the train-of-four responses following mivacurium 0.03 mg kg-1 patients with normal and decreased enzyme activity was 40% and 56%, respectively, and the mean T1 suppression after mivacurium 0.1 mg kg-1 was 100% in both groups. The times to different levels of twitch height recovery following the 0.1 mg kg-1 dose did not differ between the two groups of patients. Another 20 patients with normal or decreased pChe activity (Group 3) were given mivacurium 0.2 mg kg-1. In this group the time to maximum block was 1.4 min (1.0-4.0) mean (range) and the time to reappearance of the T1 response was 15.0 min (7.4-22.7) (range). An inverse relationship was found between the patients' pChe activity and the time to first response. It is concluded that mivacurium is short-acting in patients with normal pChe phenotype and normal to low-normal pChe activity. No patient with very low pChe activity was included in the study. A prolonged response to mivacurium may, however, be expected in these patients.

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TL;DR: Patients' satisfaction with the anaesthetist and his/her visit was not influenced by dress, and patients expressed a preference for doctors to wear name tags, white coats and short hair but disapproved of clogs, jeans, trainers and earrings.
Abstract: Two groups of adult patients (55 each) were visited pre-operatively by an anaesthetist who was dressed either formally or casually. Their response to this visit, their opinions regarding anaesthetists and their knowledge of anaesthetic work were elicited afterwards by means of a questionnaire. Patients' satisfaction with the anaesthetist and his/her visit was not influenced by dress. The anaesthetist was awarded a high level of prestige and the length of his/her training was recognised to be comparable to that of other professionals; 81.8% of patients thought that anaesthetists held a medical degree but only 35.4% thought that they worked in the intensive care unit. Patients expressed a preference for doctors to wear name tags, white coats and short hair but disapproved of clogs, jeans, trainers and earrings.

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TL;DR: In this article, 20 parturients undergoing elective Caesarean section were allocated randomly to receive crystalloid preload 20 ml kg-1 over either 20 min or 10 min before spinal anaesthesia.
Abstract: Twenty parturients undergoing elective Caesarean section were allocated randomly to receive crystalloid preload 20 ml kg-1 over either 20 min or 10 min before spinal anaesthesia. Significant hypotension (systolic arterial pressure less than 100 mm Hg and less than 80% of baseline value) occurred in six of the 10 patients in the 20-min preload group and seven of 10 patients in the 10-min preload group (ns). Both groups had a significant (P less than 0.05) increase in central venous pressure during the preload period. The mean central venous pressure in the 10-min group was 11.9 mm Hg (range 6-19 mm Hg), which was significantly greater (P less than 0.05) than that in the 20-min group (mean 7.3 mm Hg, range 2-13 mm Hg). Three patients in the 10-min group had clinically unacceptable increases in central venous pressure. This study has demonstrated that rapid administration of crystalloid preload before spinal anaesthesia did not decrease the incidence or severity of hypotension, and questions the role of crystalloid preload.

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TL;DR: Although the risk of coronary artery bypass grafting deserves further study, noncardiac surgery carries an acceptable operative risk in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Abstract: BACKGROUND We wanted to determine the risk of postoperative pulmonary complications and mortality in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. METHODS We reviewed 107 consecutive operations performed in 89 patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (forced expiratory volume in 1 second, less than 50% of predicted). RESULTS Postoperative pulmonary complications occurred in 31 operations (29%) and were significantly related to the type and duration of surgery. Also, American Society of Anesthesiologists class approached significance as a predictor. Postoperative pulmonary complications occurred at higher rates in coronary artery bypass grafting and major abdominal procedures (60% and 56%) than in other operations involving general or spinal anesthesia (27%) or in procedures performed with the patient under regional or local anesthesia (16%). When the durations of the operations were classified as less than 1 hour, 1 to 2 hours, 2 to 4 hours, and more than 4 hours, the rates of postoperative pulmonary complications were 4%, 23%, 38%, and 73%, respectively. Regarding American Society of Anesthesiologists class, postoperative pulmonary complications occurred in 10% of patients in class II, 28% of those in class III, and 46% of those in class IV. In terms of life-threatening complications, there were six deaths and only two cases of nonfatal ventilatory failure. Notably, mortality clustered primarily in coronary artery bypass graft procedures. Five of 10 patients receiving coronary artery bypass grafts died, compared with one death after 97 non-coronary artery bypass graft operations (50% vs 1%). CONCLUSIONS Although the risk of coronary artery bypass grafting deserves further study, noncardiac surgery carries an acceptable operative risk in patients with severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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TL;DR: Routine intubation or administration of buffer in cases of postnatal asphyxia had no influence on the time to onset of regular spontaneous breathing in infants with postnatal apnoea.
Abstract: The incidence, treatment and immediate course in infants with postnatal apnoea were studied. Information on all infants born in Sweden in 1985 with a low Apgar score (3 or less at 1 min or 6 or less at 5 min) was collected from the midwife and from the baby's chart. Of the 97,648 live births, 1633 (1.7%) had a low Apgar score. The risk increased with decreasing birthweight and with severe malformations. Before delivery, 19% of the low-Apgar-score infants were not expected to require resuscitation. Eighty percent of the ventilated infants were satisfactorily ventilated by bag and mask; the remainder were intubated. Of the ventilated infants, 78% developed spontaneous breathing within 10 min after birth and 89% within 20 min. Routine intubation or administration of buffer in cases of postnatal asphyxia had no influence on the time to onset of regular spontaneous breathing.