One hundred patients presenting for surgical treatment of fractured neck of femur were allocated to receive either spinal (SAB) or general (GA) anaesthesia. Before operation, the mean PaO2 was 9.04 kPa. There was a significant decrease in PaO2 of 0.68 kPa in GA group at 1 h after operation, while blood-gas values were unchanged in SAB group. Eight patients (15.7%) in GA group and five patients (10.2%) in SAB group died within 4 weeks of surgery. The difference was not statistically significant.
We have studied the severity and duration of nocturnal hypoxaemia before operation and for the first five nights after operation after elective major abdominal vascular surgery. Oxygen supplementation was almost 100% effective in keeping oxygen saturation greater than 90% during the early postoperative period; however, 50% of patients spent prolonged periods with an SpO2 less than 85% during at least one night after operation. The risk of severe hypoxaemia persists well beyond the current prescription of supplementary oxygen in these high risk patients. A significant association exists between the mean preoperative overnight saturation value and the nocturnal saturation observed subsequently in the later postoperative period.
One hundred and forty-eight patients undergoing "pin-and-plate" repair of fractured neck of femur received either subarachnoid blockade or general anaesthesia. The patients were followed up for 1 year after surgery. At the end of the year, 34% had died and 50% had returned home. Twelve per cent were either in hospital or in institutional care; 4% were lost to follow up. The mean duration of acute plus convalescent hospital bed occupancy was 84.4 days. There was a significantly lower mortality in the subarachnoid anaesthetic group by 14 days after surgery. The majority of the deaths in the general anaesthetic group were clustered between 6 and 16 days. However, at the end of 2 months the mortality rates were similar in both groups. It is conceivable that the difference in the distribution of deaths between the groups was a result of thrombo-embolism.
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