Early emergence after anesthesia with isoflurane and isoflurance shifted to sevoflurane / Noe P. San Jose, Ernesto F. Dela Cerna and Danilo C. Recto Jr.
Language: english Publication details: Fairview, Quezon City: Department of Anesthesiology, FEU-NRMF.Description: illustrations; (in folder)Content type:- text
- unmediated
- volume
- ANES ND 0001
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Room Use | Far Eastern University - Nicanor Reyes Medical Foundation Research | ANES ND 0001 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | R000321 |
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new record (02/18/2022)
Includes bibliographical references.
Abstract: We studied recorvery in 16 adult male patients, ASA I, undergoing donor nephrectomy after anesthesia with isoflurane alone (Group A; n = 8) and isoflurane shifted to sevoflurane (Group B; n = 8). Early emergence from anesthesia was assessed by measuring the time to respond to painful stimuli and to verbal command in a uniform method at 2-minute interval until full recovery is attained. Response to painful stimuli after discontinuance from isoflurane averaged 12.25 mins as compared to 11.5 mins from isoflurane + sevoflurane while response to verbal command was 21 mins and 19.25 mins in groups A and B respectively. Recovery times were not significantly increased in the isoflurane shifted to sevoflurane group. Isoflurance shifted to sevoflurane (Group B) does not provide a more rapid emergence than isoflurane group (Group A) after donor nephrectomy.
Research - Department of Anesthesiology
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