IMPLICATIONS: Antithrombin levels are severely decreased after cardiopulmonary bypass with deep hypothermic circulatory arrest. The administration of hemostatic blood products in this setting without repletion of anticoagulant elements such as antithrombin may lead to excessive systemic thrombin generation, creating a potentially hypercoaguable state.
IMPLICATIONS: Hemophilia A was modeled using factor VIII-deficient plasma and hemostatic responses to recombinant activated factor VII (rFVIIa) were studied in vitro in the presence of normal and reduced antithrombin levels. We observed enhanced thrombin generation in the presence of decreased antithrombin concentrations, an effect enhanced by rFVIIa.
IMPLICATIONS: Impairment of fibrinogen polymerization and decreased total clot strength during craniosynostosis surgery in children, due to massive blood loss and necessary intravascular volume therapy were successfully treated by substituting human fibrinogen concentrates, thereby avoiding the need for fresh frozen plasma or platelets.
IMPLICATIONS: The main hemostatic effect of recombinant-activated factor (rFVIIa) is to increase the rate of thrombin generation, whereas fibrinogen increases fibrin clot strength. Using both rFVIIa and fibrinogen, in vitro clot formation was most improved in whole blood after cardiopulmonary bypass.
IMPLICATIONS: Hypothermia, when instituted during cardiopulmonary bypass and maintained into the postoperative period with limited rewarming, decreases postoperative cognitive dysfunction.
IMPLICATIONS: The addition of an underbody forced-air warming system to the near-normothermic thermal management protocol used at the Cleveland Clinic significantly increased pre-bypass temperature. However, supplemental warming had no further clinically important effect on core temperature and patients in both groups were normothermic upon leaving the operating room.
IMPLICATIONS: Physiological studies in anesthetized, paralyzed, and mechanically ventilated children showed that the resting lung volume is markedly decreased even after lung recruitment total lung capacity maneuvers and positive end-expiratory pressure as clinically recommended. In addition, the viscoelastic (tissue) component of respiratory system resistance, which had been considered insignificant, was found to be a major component of the total resistance and may affect the clinical management of ventilated patients.
IMPLICATIONS: Pediatric patients previously under the care of another subspecialist for their chronic pain and subsequently referred to an anesthesiology-based pediatric chronic pain medicine program seem to be experiencing significantly worse health-related quality of life.
IMPLICATIONS: Selective cerebral perfusion at 50 mL {middle dot} kg-1 {middle dot} min-1 may result in higher intracranial pressure compared with baseline. The results of the present study also indicate that near-infrared spectroscopy-derived blood blow index adds further information about changes of cerebral perfusion during bypass and selective cerebral perfusion during congenital heart surgery in infants and newborns.
IMPLICATIONS: Validity for an efficient screening tool for depression is established, and depression prevalence rates in a presurgical sample are demonstrated, highlighting the need for screening in this population.
IMPLICATIONS: Mothers of children undergoing surgery are more anxious than women undergoing minor surgery themselves. Predictors of maternal anxiety include child age and maternal monitoring coping.
IMPLICATIONS: Venous cannulation is frequently performed without any analgesia. We observed a significant reduction in the incidence and severity of venous cannulation pain after a flash of light. This is a safe, effective, and easy-to-use method to minimize venous cannulation pain.
IMPLICATIONS: We describe two cases in which a patient without an escort was discharged after an ambulatory surgical procedure and while driving themselves home were involved in a motor vehicle accident. Discharge without an escort after anesthesia or sedation is not recommended and appropriate arrangements to transport the patient home are needed.
IMPLICATIONS: Patients breathing 70% xenon in oxygen required 1.5 {micro}g/mL propofol supplementation in 50% of patients to avoid a response to skin incision, compared with 2.2 {micro}g/mL with nitrous oxide. Xenon therefore seems to be clinically more potent than nitrous oxide but still requires minimal supplement of a hypnotic anesthetic.
IMPLICATIONS: Ischemia-reperfusion injury to the liver can lead to changes in blood flow, cytokine energy content, and liver structure. This study, performed in a rat hepatic injury model, demonstrates that sevoflurane, but not isoflurane, protects against such injury.
IMPLICATIONS: Chemically diverse nonvolatile or poorly volatile compounds show anesthetic-like modulation of glycine and {gamma}-aminobutyric acid type A receptors, and reduced modulation of mutant receptors that are relatively resistant to volatile anesthetics, consistent with a common mechanism of action.
IMPLICATIONS: The kinetics of the action of propofol and its lesser hydrophobic derivatives 2-isopropylphenol and phenol on human 5-HT3A receptors were examined. At least two separate inhibitory actions on 5-HT3A receptors could be identified for propofol, whereas the enhancing action seen for the two related smaller phenol derivatives could no longer be detected. 5-HT-dependent and 5-HT-independent interactions could be distinguished for all three drugs. Propofol was less potent than expected from its hydrophobic properties. Underlying mechanisms appear to involve the phenolic hydroxyl group, hydrophobic interactions, and steric restrictions.
IMPLICATIONS: The present study demonstrated that acute hyperglycemia impaired isoflurane-induced vascular adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channel activity via activation of protein kinase C. These results indicated that hyperglycemia may contribute to perioperative risk by impairing isoflurane-induced cardiovascular protective mechanisms via activation of vascular adenosine triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels.
IMPLICATIONS: Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) transcribe mRNA for the nociceptin/orphanin FQ(N/OFQ) receptor (NOP). Here we show that these cells also transcribe the peptide precursor pre-pro-N/OFQ, suggesting NOP-mediated autoregulation of PBMC function.
IMPLICATIONS: Measurement of cardiac output using improved arterial pressure waveform analysis without manual calibration (FloTrac/Vigileo) was comparable with intermittent pulmonary artery thermodilution cardiac output measurement in patients undergoing cardiac surgery.
IMPLICATIONS: Spectral and Response Entropy were found to be predictive of recall in anesthetized volunteers and warrant further study in surgical patients.
IMPLICATIONS: A new website demonstrates the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of fospropofol and shows how it differs from propofol.
IMPLICATIONS: Hypotension associated with epidural anesthesia impairs perfusion of the gastric tube.
IMPLICATIONS: Epinephrine, in concentrations found in the plasma of laboring women, attenuated the vasoconstriction caused by norepinephrine in an ex vivo rat model of isolated uterine microvessels.
IMPLICATIONS: Poor adherence is a potential flaw for any guideline, which may be improved using decision support (DS). We implemented a DS system in an anesthesia information management system (AIMS) and improved adherence to the departmental guidelines for prescribing postoperative nausea and vomiting prophylaxis.
IMPLICATIONS: Clonidine-induced sedation is functionally and electrophysiologically similar to early stage nonrapid eye movement sleep. Similarities with observations made during general anesthesia and vegetative state suggest alterations in the activity of a network common to all these states.
IMPLICATIONS: Topical application of arginine-vasopressin (AVP) (10-9 M, 10-7 M, and 10-5 M), but not a lower concentration (10-11 M), induced pial arteriolar vasoconstriction in rabbits. The constrictor effect of 10-7 M AVP was reduced after transient (5-min) cerebral ischemia.
IMPLICATIONS: In spontaneously breathing neonatal rats, we found that up to 50% xenon can be safely administered under conditions of NT or hypothermia for at least 5 h without CO2 retention, whereas 70% xenon was associated with respiratory acidosis.
IMPLICATIONS: Dehydration in elderly patients, a common perioperative problem in the elderly population, may provoke postoperative cognitive dysfunction. Despite moderate dehydration after bowel preparation, no cognitive deficits developed in patients of an age associated with a significant incidence of postoperative cognitive dysfunction.
IMPLICATIONS: Tetanic stimulation of peripheral nerves prior to transcranial stimulation can augment the amplitudes of motor-evoked potentials (MEPs), so called "posttetanic MEPs." Under propofol/fentanyl anesthesia, posttetanic MEPs monitoring was feasible at a deep level of neuromuscular blockade without patient movement in response to transcranial stimulation.
IMPLICATIONS: During intubation with manual in-line stabilization by an assistant, videolaryngoscopy produced better glottic visualization than direct laryngoscopy, but did not significantly decrease movement of the nonpathologic cervical spine.
IMPLICATIONS: In this prospective study, we evaluated the situation of anesthesia, intensive care medicine, emergency medicine, and pain therapy in 78.2% of Zambian hospitals registered at the Zambian Ministry of Health to perform minor or major surgery. Considering the standards used in hospitals of industrialized nations, our results are startling and merit dissemination to broad readership to alert clinicians in developed countries.
IMPLICATIONS: Celecoxib, 400 mg po, given preoperatively and/or after major plastic surgery and for 4 days, was effective in improving postoperative pain management as well as the speed and quality of recovery. There was no increase in the incidence of postoperative side effects or wound complications. Finally, perioperative administration of celecoxib offered no clinically significant advantages over postoperative administration alone.
IMPLICATIONS: We evaluated the effect of additional thoracic epidural neostigmine (1 {micro}g/kg) to epidural bupivacaine on postoperative ileus in patients undergoing abdominal aortic surgery. According to our results, thoracic epidural neostigmine enables faster restoration of bowel sounds and shortens duration of postoperative ileus after abdominal aortic surgery with no adverse effects.
IMPLICATIONS: This work suggests how spinal injection of opioids can produce a peripheral, segmental antiinflammatory effect, and how this effect can be enhanced by drugs as clinically available phosphodiesterase inhibitors. These findings may help to improve segmental anesthesia procedures.
IMPLICATIONS: Prostaglandins in the spinal dorsal horn play an important role in initiating central sensitization. Blocking the action of cyclooxygenase limits central sensitization in a rat model. Surprisingly, in this study cyclooxygenase-2 inhibitors (celecoxib) appeared to be weaker antihyperalgesic drugs than the nonselective COX inhibitors (ketorolac).
IMPLICATIONS: Inhibitors of nitric oxide synthase (NOS) and cyclooxygenase (COX) have traditionally been viewed as providing pain relief, primarily by decreasing inflammation and the sensitization of pain receptors peripherally. This study demonstrates that NOS and COX pathways are upregulated in the spinal cord in response to peripheral tissue injury, which suggests that NOS and COX inhibitors may be antinociceptive primarily through a central effect.
IMPLICATIONS: We found that neurons with ascending spinal projections and neurons without such projections had similar sensitivity to immobilizing doses of isoflurane, halothane, and propofol. This suggests that anesthetic depression would equally affect transmission of nociceptive information locally, within a reflex pathway, and to sites more rostral within or beyond the spinal cord.
IMPLICATIONS: Compared with opioid-based patient-controlled analgesia, patient-controlled continuous interscalene block improved analgesia, but not function, during early rehabilitation of the shoulder joint in patients undergoing open shoulder procedures.
IMPLICATIONS: Continuous wound infiltration with ropivacaine can be a useful alternative to thoracic paravertebral block for pain management after mastectomy.
IMPLICATIONS: Rapid crystalloid prehydration can affect cerebrospinal fluid flow in the lumbar region, reducing cephalic spread of 0.5% isobaric tetracaine and delaying the time to reach peak sensory level.
IMPLICATIONS: Postoperative analgesia with locally infiltrated levobupivacaine was significantly more potent and longer lasting than that achieved by lidocaine plus epinephrine in patients undergoing nasal surgery.
IMPLICATIONS: Use of a Doppler ultrasound device results in a more lateral insertion point than the classical insertion point. This technique provides a high probability of localizing either the medial or posterior cord of the brachial plexus on the first insertion attempt.
IMPLICATIONS: We present a novel technique for confirming correct catheter tip position in the interscalene space using ultrasound to view the injection of agitated contrast. This method facilitates ultrasound-guided placement of peripheral nerve catheters.
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