We conducted a randomised, controlled study to investigate the effect of adding a background infusion to patient‐controlled epidural analgesia for postoperative pain relief. Forty‐two patients scheduled for elective lower abdominal gynaecological surgery received patient‐controlled epidural analgesi
Comparison of recovery following rapacuronium, with and without neostigmine, and succinylcholine
✍ Scribed by A. Hayes; D. Breslin; J. Reid; R. K. Mirakhur
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 88 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2409
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
The neuromuscular blocking effects of a single dose of rapacuronium 1.5 mg.kg^−1^ with or without reversal with neostigmine have been examined in the present study and compared with a dose of succinylcholine 1.0 mg.kg^−1^. Neuromuscular block was measured mechanomyographically using train‐of‐four stimulation. Complete block occurred within 1 min with both agents. Twenty‐five per cent recovery of the first response of the train‐of‐four occurred in a median [range] time of 7.6 [5.7–11.3] min in the succinylcholine group and in 14.2 [8.8–23.6] and 15.1 [9.6–23.4] min in the rapacuronium groups with and without neostigmine reversal, respectively. Spontaneous recovery to a train‐of‐four ratio of 0.8 took 33.4 [20.0–79.0] min with rapacuronium but this was reduced to about 21.2 [13.9–33.7] min when neostigmine was administered at 25% recovery of first twitch of the train‐of‐four.
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