Isoflurane versus fentanyl: hemodynamic effects in cancer patients treated with anthracyclines
Autor: | William J. Hoskins, Mary Kathryn Pierri, Robert F. Bedford, Alisa C. Thorne, John P. Orazem, Stephen C. Rubin, D. Dwyer, Nitin K. Shah, Deborah Matarazzo |
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Rok vydání: | 1993 |
Předmět: |
Time Factors
Hemodynamics Blood Pressure Atrial Function Right Acid-Base Imbalance Pulmonary Artery Loading dose Ventricular Function Left Fentanyl Electrocardiography Heart Rate Risk Factors medicine Humans Decompensation Pulmonary Wedge Pressure Cardiac Output Ovarian Neoplasms Laparotomy Antibiotics Antineoplastic Isoflurane business.industry Stroke Volume Perioperative Middle Aged equipment and supplies Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Anesthesia Anesthetic Anesthesia Intravenous Vascular resistance Female Vascular Resistance Anesthesia Inhalation Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Journal of Cardiothoracic and Vascular Anesthesia. 7:307-311 |
ISSN: | 1053-0770 |
DOI: | 10.1016/1053-0770(93)90010-i |
Popis: | Cancer patients treated with anthracycline derivatives are at risk for perioperative cardiovascular decompensation. The authors studied hemodynamic performance before, during, and after laparotomy in 14 anthracycline-treated patients with ovarian carcinoma. General anesthesia was maintained with 70% N2O in O2, and patients were randomized to receive supplementation with either isoflurane, 0.59% end-tidal +/- 0.04 (mean +/- SE), or fentanyl, 2.67 micrograms/kg +/- 0.49 as a loading dose, and a total dose of 7.16 micrograms/kg +/- 0.71. The degree of hemodynamic stability relative to the baseline was assessed. There was no obvious superiority of either technique prior to the skin incision. However, during and immediately after surgery, a clearer tendency for isoflurane-N2O to result in better hemodynamic stability was found. Isoflurane-N2O demonstrated significantly smaller change scores in systemic vascular resistance (SVR) and cardiac index (CI). At the start of surgery, the isoflurane-N2O change in SVR was 228.08 dyne.sec.cm-5 compared to 479.58 for the fentanyl patients, (P = 0.002); at the end of surgery the corresponding means were -12.09 and 703.14 dyne.sec.cm-5, respectively, (P = 0.002). Isoflurane-N2O was associated with significantly greater CI stability in the early postoperative period: the isoflurane-N2O mean change was -0.081 L/min/m2, versus -0.993 for the fentanyl-N2O patients, (P = 0.005). The authors conclude that anthracycline-treated patients who do not have overt evidence of cardiomyopathy can be safely anesthetized with either anesthetic technique. However, during surgery and in the early postoperative period, an isoflurane-N2O technique appears to offer better hemodynamic stability. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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