Severe postoperative pulmonary hypertension occurred after 2% of the cardiac procedures and in most cases was managed successfully with conventional treatment and had a favorable postoperative outcome. The low incidence relative to previous reports may reflect the benefits of early correction and improved intraoperative and postoperative care.
Six indexes for diagnosing uneven ventilation by tracer gas washout were studied. The indexes were lung clearance index, mixing ratio, Becklake index, multiple-breath alveolar mixing inefficiency, moment ratio, and pulmonary clearance delay, all of which increase with impaired pulmonary gas mixing. In model lung tests, indexes that compared the actual washout curve with a calculated ideal curve (mixing ratio, multiple-breath alveolar mixing inefficiency, and pulmonary clearance delay) were unaffected by changes in tidal volume and series dead space, whereas the others varied markedly. In both spontaneously breathing and mechanically ventilated patients all indexes showed a significant difference between smokers and nonsmokers (P less than 0.002), but the indexes were somewhat different in their assessment of different ventilatory patterns. However, the mean value for all indexes, with the exception of mixing ratio, was smallest with a fast insufflation followed by an end-inspiratory pause. Any of the indexes may be useful if its limitations are recognized, but mixing ratio, multiple-breath alveolar mixing inefficiency, and pulmonary clearance delay seem preferable, because they are not affected by changes in tidal volume and dead space fraction.
Static pressure-volume (P-V) curves of the respiratory system were obtained in 48 healthy children (1 mo to 16 yr of age) during anesthesia and muscle paralysis. The lungs were inflated to a pressure of 25 to 40 cm H2O, and during the subsequent deflation an interrupter placed in the airway tubing opened and closed every 0.16 s. Airway flow was integrated to obtain the volume decrement between consecutive flow interruptions. Airway pressure was measured during interruptions, and a curve relating pressure to lung volume was plotted, assuming the lung volume at zero pressure to equal functional residual capacity (FRC). FRC was measured using tracer gas washout. The maximum slope of the P-V curve (maximum compliance = Crsmax, ml/cm H2O) was closely related to length (in centimeters) of the child: Crsmax = 7.7 x 10(-4) x length2.38; r = 0.97. The pressure coinciding with Crsmax was 6 +/- 1 cm H2O (mean +/- SD) in infants (1 to 6 mo of age) and 12 +/- 1 cm H2O in older children (> 1.5 yr of age). Total lung capacity (TLC) per kg body weight increased with age and was 52 +/- 13 ml/kg in infants and 87 +/- 11 mg/kg in older children. The FRC/TLC ratio was greater in infants (38 +/- 4%) than in older children (30 +/- 5%). The lung volume coinciding with Crsmax was nearly the same at all ages, when expressed as a percentage of TLC: 62 +/- 3%. Specific compliance of the respiratory system, that is, Crsmax/TLC, decreased with growth and was 0.044 +/- 0.006 cm H2O-1 in infants and 0.035 +/- 0.004 cm H2O-1 in older children. It is concluded that although the P-V relations of the respiratory system changed markedly with growth, especially during the first year of life, the lung volume (%TLC) at which maximum compliance occurred varied little.
Sixty-one children, ASA physical status I, aged 2-14 years, admitted for strabismus surgery were studied. All were premedicated with diazepam and atropin rectally. Anesthesia was induced with thiopental or with halothane on a facemask, and succinylcholine was given to facilitate tracheal intubation. Anesthesia was maintained with halothane and nitrous oxide. Each child was randomly assigned to receive either no antiemetic prophylaxis (control), droperidol 0.075 mg/kg, or dixyrazine 0.25 mg/kg. The drugs were injected intravenously at the end of surgery. The incidence of vomiting during the following 24 h was 65% in the control group, 48% in the droperidol group, and 25% in the dixyrazine group (P less than 0.05 as compared to the control group). Four hours after the operation, six children in the droperidol group and none in the dixyrazine group (P less than 0.05) were difficult to arouse. It is concluded that dixyrazine reduces the incidence of postoperative vomiting without causing heavy sedation.
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