Publications by authors named "Traugott F"

Propofol or methohexitone was given to the same twenty patients on two separate occasions during total intravenous anaesthesia for microlaryngeal surgery. With propofol the quality of induction was superior. Fewer patients required supplementation.

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The Kubicek thoracic cylinder model of impedance cardiography (IC) for measuring beat-by-beat stroke volume (SV) was evaluated in controlled studies using the electromagnetic flowmeter (FM) as the reference technique. Assuming the validity of the Kubicek equation for stroke volume calculation, IC stroke volume was found to be a linear function of EM values at any one haematocrit over a wide range of SV, but the slope of the relationship fell as haematocrit fell. Experiments using the same equation in dogs, in which blood resistivity in vivo (rho tau) was made the dependent variable, and the EM-derived value was used for stroke volume, showed that rho tau was almost constant over a wide range of haematocrits.

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Continuous pulse oximetry monitoring was used to determine the incidence of hypoxaemia (arterial oxygen saturation less than or equal to 90%) occurring in the first hour of postoperative recovery. Of 107 patients studied, hypoxaemia was recorded in 80%. Twenty-eight (26%) of these patients had saturations below 80%.

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Suprabulbar and bulbospinal integration of cardiorespiratory responses to cold and heat stress was studied in groups of normal, thalamic and pontine rabbits. The animals sat in an airconditioned environmental chamber in which ambient temperature (TA) was maintained sequentially at 22 degrees C, 12 degrees C, 22 degrees C and 35 degrees C, with an accuracy of +/- 1 degree C. Neither thalamic nor pontine rabbits could maintain core temperature in cold or heat.

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The steroid induction agent, Althesin, infused intravenously in light anesthetic doses in otherwise unsedated man (84 micrograms kg-1 min-1) and rabbit (140 micrograms kg-1 min-1) causes similar autonomic and somatic effects. In the rabbit, the rise in heart rate (mainly due to central vagal blockade) and the selective depressant effects on respiratory rate are independent of CNS 5-hydroxytryptamine and noradrenaline. The rise in arterial pressure and the fall in hindlimb conductance is dependent on CNS 5-hydroxytryptamine and noradrenaline synthesizing neurons, which are probably arranged in series.

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Contrasting hypotheses of mammalian thermoregulation were tested in unanesthetized rabbits in relation to the role of the central nervous (CNS) monoamines 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and noradrenaline (NA) in regulating lung function and ear skin blood flow (Doppler flowmeter). Normal rabbits and rabbits with CNS depletion of 5-HT and NA (caused by the neurotoxins 5,7-dihydroxytryptamine and 6-hydroxydopamine) were studied in an airconditioned chamber at ambient temperatures of 12 degrees, 22 degrees and 35 degrees C. The results suggest that CNS 5-HT plays an excitatory role in the heat conservation mechanism of cold-induced ear skin vasoconstriction, and that this effect is inhibited by CNS NA to cause heat dissipation during heat stress.

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1. The accuracy and limitations of the non-invasive impedance cardiograph technique were examined in dogs with electromagnetic flow-transducers mounted on the aortic root over a wide range of physiological conditions of anaemia, heart rate, stroke volume and myocardial inotropy. 2.

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Blood resistivity (rho) values used in the Kubicek formula for stroke volume (SV) calculation by impedance cardiography are bench derived and do not take into account complex blood velocity movements and dynamic hematocrit changes in systole. In this study, the relevance of rho has been questioned. Thoracic resistivity (rho tau) has been calculated in dogs from the rearranged Kubicek formula: rho tau = (SV .

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