SummaryFour patients who developed unusual neurological sequelae after outpatient anaesthesia are described. Propofol is strongly implicated as the cause. All four patients were female with no previous history of psychiatric disorder or neurological disease, unpremedicated, and had procedures of duration less than 20 minutes. HyperreJexia and hypertonicity were present postoperatively and the reactions appeared to be triggered by an external stimulus. Three patients were examined by a neurologist and had a normal electroencephalograph. Two patients were on the same operating list; quality control was carried out on the anaesthetic agents used, and blood samples sent for toxicology showed no abnormalities. Mechanisms underlying these reactions are discussed.
We have assessed the cardiovascular changes associated with emergence from anaesthesia, reversal of neuromuscular blockade and extubation in a group of 14 patients immediately after coronary artery bypass graft surgery had been completed. Patients were randomly allocated to receive either esmolol 500 micrograms.kg-1 over 1 min followed by 100 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 or placebo starting prior to reversal. Significant hypertension and tachycardia occurred in the placebo group, whilst these changes were prevented by the administration of esmolol.
Twenty patients, who underwent coronary revascularization without cardioplegic arrest, were given (during cardiopulmonary bypass) either magnesium chloride 16 mmol in 10 ml of water (magnesium group) or 10 ml of water alone (control group). Plasma and urinary magnesium concentrations were measured for 24 h after operation. ECG was recorded continuously during this period. QT intervals corrected for heart rate (QTcorr) were calculated from periodic full lead ECG. The mean plasma magnesium concentrations in the control group were less than normal throughout the study, while hypomagnesaemia did not occur in the magnesium group. Urinary magnesium excretion was higher in the magnesium group, with 58% of the administered magnesium excreted in the first 24 h. The observed incidence of frequent or ventricular arrhythmias was 22% in the magnesium group compared with 63% in the control group. No significant differences in QTcorr intervals were observed between the groups.
Fifty-six patients undergoing elective laparoscopy were allocated randomly to two groups. Group H received alcuronium and were ventilated artificially using 0.5% halothane and nitrous oxide in oxygen. Group E breathed spontaneously a mixture of enflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen. Arterial pressure, heart rate, tidal volume, respiratory rate and end-tidal carbon dioxide tension (PECO2) were monitored. The electrocardiogram (ECG) was recorded continuously using magnetic tape, from before induction until the patient left the recovery area. The incidence of arrhythmias was similar in the two groups. No arrhythmias occurred after the insufflated carbon dioxide had been removed from the abdomen. Spontaneous ventilation with enflurane anaesthesia is a simple and safe, technique for routine laparoscopy, providing the intra-abdominal pressure does not exceed 25 mm Hg.
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