Background And Objective: The prevalence of persistent pain after orthopaedic surgery has been the subject of only few studies and the risk factors for persistent pain have been evaluated even more rarely. The purpose of the present study was to evaluate the degree and the risk factors of persistent pain after knee arthroplasty.
Methods: The prevalence of persistent postoperative pain after knee replacement was evaluated with a questionnaire in a large, register-based cross-sectional prevalence study.
Background: In this study, investigating the effects of mobile phone radiation on test animals, eleven pigs were anaesthetised to the level where burst-suppression pattern appears in the electroencephalogram (EEG). At this level of anaesthesia both human subjects and animals show high sensitivity to external stimuli which produce EEG bursts during suppression. The burst-suppression phenomenon represents a nonlinear control system, where low-amplitude EEG abruptly switches to very high amplitude bursts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFConventional nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) have a well-documented nephrotoxic action. Still, there are only few studies that have investigated the nephrotoxicity of cyclo-oxycenase-2-inhibitors during the perioperative period. Thirty patients scheduled for elective laparoscopic hysterectomy were enrolled in this prospective, randomized double-blind study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetic patients are known to have additional risks in surgery. We evaluated haemodynamic profiles, incidence of arrhythmias and post-operative recovery when remifentanil infusion was used for vitrectomies. We compared 22 diabetics with 22 age-matched controls undergoing vitrectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand
November 2006
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand
July 2006
Background: Etoricoxib alleviates and prevents acute pain. The hypothesis of our study was that the pre-operative use of etoricoxib would reduce the post-operative need for additional pain treatment.
Methods: In this double-blind, randomized and active placebo-controlled study, 75 patients were pre-medicated 1.
Acta Anaesthesiol Scand
September 2006
Background: The cyclo-oxygenase-2 inhibitor, parecoxib, can be administered parenterally. The recommended dose for post-operative use is 40 mg twice daily, which may not be the appropriate dose for the treatment of visceral pain. We studied the effect of a single dose of parecoxib of either 40 or 80 mg in laparoscopic cholecystectomy, and its effect on opioid-induced side-effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: No simple method exists to distinguish children in need for premedication. The present study was planned to detect preoperative anxiety levels of children by rating their drawings.
Methods: Sixty ASA I children aged 4-7 years undergoing adenoidectomy were divided into AGIT and CALM groups according to agitation level observed during venous cannulation.
Gabapentin alleviates and/or prevents acute nociceptive and inflammatory pain both in animals and volunteers, especially when given before trauma. Gabapentin might also reduce postoperative pain. To test the hypothesis that gabapentin reduces the postoperative need for additional pain treatment (postoperative opioid sparing effect of gabapentin in humans), we gave 1200 mg of gabapentin or 15 mg of oxazepam (active placebo) 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: Profound neuromuscular block (NMB) quantified by post-tetanic count (PTC) may prevent all muscle activity during anesthesia. We studied whether monitoring of PTC prevents airway pressure alarms or visible movements of the vocal cords and the abdomen during endolaryngeal procedures (ELPs).
Methods: In this prospective, double blind, study 50 healthy (ASA 1-3) patients scheduled for ELPs were randomized into five groups: atracurium, mivacurium, rocuronium, vecuronium and succinylcholine.
Background And Objective: Laparoscopic and open surgery have been compared with conflicting results regarding their systemic responses. The sensitivity of biochemical markers that are used to discriminate between the stress responses to different types of surgery varies from study to study. We wanted to evaluate the stress response and the sensitivity of clinical and biochemical stress markers in patients undergoing laparoscopically assisted vaginal or abdominal hysterectomy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Because pregnancy increases the sensitivity of nervous tissue to local anaesthetics, pregnant patients may be at higher risk of developing neurologic deficits after spinal block than non-pregnant patients. Therefore, we evaluated prospectively the incidence and type of neurologic symptoms after spinal anaesthesia with hyperbaric bupivacaine for caesarean section.
Methods: In this prospective follow-up study we recorded neurologic complications during anaesthesia and postoperatively until discharge from the hospital of 219 patients, who underwent caesarean section under spinal anaesthesia with hyperbaric bupivacaine (5 mg/ml, mean 13 mg).
Effective plasma concentrations of propofol, thiopentone and ketamine were determined at different endpoints in a study with randomized, crossover design in nine New Zealand White rabbits. A continuous infusion was used (30 ml/h) with concentrations of 10 mg/ml for propofol, 25 mg/ml for thiopentone and 20 mg/ml for ketamine. The endpoints were loss of the righting reflex, loss of purposeful reactions to tail clamping (as an example of a peripheral pain stimulus) or to intranostril insufflation of ammonia vapour (as an example of a central reflex stimulus), and the recovery of these reflexes and reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Because of its pain-attenuating and sedative properties oral ketamine has been used as premedication in children and adults. We wanted to compare in children scheduled for adenoidectomy safety and efficacy of oral ketamine with a premedication that causes similar preoperative sedation and relief of pain at the venepuncture site. We also evaluated the effect of i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: The fade in train-of-four (TOF) monitoring is considered to be due to blocking of the prejunctional nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (AchRs). During onset of the neuromuscular block (NMB) tubocurarine (TC) causes more fade in the TOF responses than vecuronium (VEC). Therefore we wanted to investigate whether onset or duration of action of VEC or TC would be improved with a priming dose of an agent with different prejunctional activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe cortical responses to auditory stimuli were studied in 12 patients during isoflurane anaesthesia producing burst suppression (ETisof (SD) 1.4 (0.2) vol.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The goal of this double-blinded, prospective study was to compare the costs incurred by waiting time of intense neuromuscular block while posttetanic count (PTC) was maintained at 0-2 during jet ventilation. Fifty patients were randomized into five groups to receive atracurium (ATR), mivacurium (MIV), rocuronium (ROC), vecuronium (VEC), and succinylcholine (SUCC). PTC < or =2 was maintained until completion of laryngomicroscopy by administering additional doses of relaxants or by adjusting the speed of the infusion of SUCC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied recovery from halothane anaesthesia in 93 children, aged 1-3 yr, undergoing day-case adenoidectomy. Children were allocated randomly to receive thiopental 5 mg kg-1 (group TH), alfentanil 10 micrograms kg-1 and propofol 3 mg kg-1 (group PAH) or 5% halothane (group HH) for induction of anaesthesia. In group TH, tracheal intubation was facilitated with succinylcholine (suxamethonium) 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe clinical effectiveness of locally administered opioids is still under discussion; in particular, the potency of morphine in settings other than intra-articular arthroscopy has been questioned. We developed another pain model, postpartum resection of the fallopian tubes for sterilisation, in which each patient serves as her own control when one side is infiltrated with the active drug (in this study sufentanil 5 mg) and the contralateral side with normal saline. In the control group both sides are infiltrated with plain saline.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the effect of anticholinergics on the incidence of cardiac arrhythmias during paediatric anaesthesia. ASA I-II children (n = 77) undergoing adenoidectomy were randomly allocated to three groups. Intravenous atropine 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: The purpose of the present study was to investigate the interaction of chronic smoking and the actions of atracurium (ATR). Twenty nonsmokers (NON-SMOK) were compared with 80 smokers, who were randomized into three groups: 30 patients received 21 mg/d transdermal nicotine system > or = 10 h before fentanyl/thiopental/N2O/O2/isoflurane anesthesia (TD-NICO), whereas the abstinent group received a placebo transdermal system (ABST, n = 30). The TD-NICO and ABST groups refrained from smoking for at least 10 h before the induction of anesthesia.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDuring isoflurane-induced electroencephalographic (EEG) suppression, external stimuli evoke high-amplitude cortical responses (bursts). We tested whether bursts evoked by somatosensory stimuli would reliably distinguish intact somatosensory pathways from pathways in which peripheral nerve conduction had been blocked by local anesthetic. Ten subjects were anesthetized with isoflurane until burst suppression was achieved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElectroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol
May 1996
We recorded visual evoked potentials (VEPs) to flash stimuli in moderately deep anaesthesia when EEG showed burst suppression pattern. Flash VEPs could consistently be recorded in all 8 test subjects during bursts but not during suppressions. We conclude that during isoflurane-induced EEG suppression VEPs to flash stimuli are also suppressed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied cortical reactivity to auditory, visual, and somatosensory stimuli during moderate and deep levels of isoflurane anesthesia at which the electroencephalogram (EEG) showed burst suppression patterns, defined as alternating high amplitude bursts and periods of suppressed background activity. Fifteen patients scheduled for gynecologic surgery were anesthetized with isoflurane until burst suppression appeared in the EEG. During steady state burst suppression at 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Anaesthesiol Scand
August 1995
The aim of this study was to compare propofol produced EEG burst suppression with isoflurane produced burst suppression in rabbits and to see whether rabbits can serve as models in studying the effects of different anaesthetics on human EEG. We recorded EEG of eight rabbits anaesthetised with isoflurane and propofol. The isoflurane bursts had higher amplitude than propofol bursts (P < 0.
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