We studied a number of factors that may be associated with urinary retention, in particular the method of postoperative analgesia delivery, in 47 men and 69 women undergoing lower limb joint replacements. The following factors were studied: age, gender, height, weight, previous history of urinary retention, presence of symptoms suggestive of urinary tract obstruction, type of anaesthetic (general anaesthetic or spinal anaesthetic), type of postoperative analgesia (intramuscular or patient-controlled analgesia with morphine) and the total dose of morphine given. Urinary retention developed in 18.1% of patients. Stepwise logistic regression analysis was used to identify independent explanators of an increased probability of developing urinary retention. Three factors emerged - male gender, increasing age and the use of patient-controlled analgesia.
Isoflurane has been considered the agent of choice where preservation of splanchnic blood flow is required. Liver blood flow and the hepatic artery buffer response are maintained better in the presence of isoflurane than with other volatile anaesthetic agents. The effects of desflurane have not been assessed in humans. Therefore, we have compared the effects of isoflurane and desflurane anaesthesia on small bowel and hepatic microcirculatory flow during major surgery using laser Doppler flowmetry in a prospective, randomized, single-blind, crossover study. Patients were allocated randomly to receive desflurane or isoflurane (1 MAC) in oxygen-enriched air. Steady-state jejunal and liver blood flow in segment III were assessed by laser Doppler flowmetry. Volatile anaesthetics were then interchanged, and measurements repeated at steady state. Desflurane anaesthesia at 1 MAC was associated with significantly greater gut blood flow than 1 MAC of isoflurane. These differences could not be explained by systemic haemodynamic differences. The similarity in total hepatic flow between groups implies an intact hepatic artery buffer response with desflurane and isoflurane.
We studied a number of factors that may be associated with urinary retention, in particular the method of postoperative analgesia delivery, in 47 men and 69 women undergoing lower limb joint replacements. The following factors were studied: age, gender, height, weight, previous history of urinary retention, presence of symptoms suggestive of urinary tract obstruction, type of anaesthetic (general anaesthetic or spinal anaesthetic), type of postoperative analgesia (intramuscular or patient-controlled analgesia with morphine) and the total dose of morphine given. Urinary retention developed in 18.1% of patients.Stepwise logistic regression analysis was used to identify independent explanators of an increased probability of developing urinary retention. Three factors emerged ± male gender, increasing age and the use of patient-controlled analgesia.
The use of interpleural analgesia is described in six patients with a variety of advanced malignancies suffering from pain uncontrolled by opioids. The benefits and complications of the technique are discussed including management of the catheters at home and the measurement of plasma bupivacaine concentrations. Interpleural analgesia can provide good analgesia in a small, selected population of patients with otherwise uncontrolled pain of malignant origin.
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