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Query: UMLS:C0030201 (
Postoperative pain
)
1,085
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A hundred patients scheduled for elective abdominal surgery were randomized to either general anaesthesia (low-dose fentanyl) and systemic morphine for postoperative pain or combined general anaesthesia and epidural analgesia with etidocaine 1.5% intraoperatively (T4-S5) and bupivacaine 0.5% 5 ml/4 h for 24 h and morphine 4 mg/12 h for 72 h.
Postoperative pain
was better controlled by the epidural regimen (P less than 0.0001). We found no significant reduction in postoperative mortality (6% to 2%), pneumonia (28% to 20%), cardiac dysrhythmia (10% to 5%) and wound complications (14% to 11%) by the epidural analgesic regimen. The incidence of deep venous thrombosis (125I-fibrinogen scan) was 32% after general anaesthesia and low-dose heparin and 34% after epidural analgesia with no prophylactic antithrombotic treatment (P greater than 0.9). Postoperative weight loss and decrease in serum-
albumin
and serum-transferrin, as well as the reduction in haemoglobin and the need for postoperative transfusions, were similar in the two groups. Convalescence, as assessed by postoperative fatigue, restoration of bowel function (flatus, bowel movement and food intake) and the time until the patients were self-aided at their preoperative level, was not reduced by epidural analgesia. Since 50% of the patients in each group suffered from one or more of the above-mentioned postoperative complications, this epidural regimen was not effective in reducing postoperative morbidity after major abdominal surgery despite the achievement of adequate pain relief.
...
PMID:A controlled study on the effect of epidural analgesia with local anaesthetics and morphine on morbidity after abdominal surgery. 408 79
We report a 75-year-old man with the liver cirrhosis of Child-Pugh B who underwent nephrectomy. Preoperative serum examination revealed increases in GOT, GPT, LDH and total bilirubin, decreases in cholinesterase and
albumin
, and prolongation of prothrombin time. We selected spinal anesthesia using bupivacaine and fentanyl rather than epidural anesthesia in combination with isoflurane inhalation anesthesia to supplement intra-operative anesthesia and post-operative pain relief. We explained the risks of blood coagulopathy and the predictable venous dilatation in the epidural space to the patient and relatives on obtaining informed consent. The surgery was completed uneventfully in 2.5 hours.
Post-operative pain
control was satisfactory and hepatic dysfunction did not deteriorate in the postoperative period.
...
PMID:[Combination of spinal and inhalation anesthesia for nephrectomy in a cirrhotic patient]. 1724 50