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1.
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology ; : 203-203, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-190097

ABSTRACT

Article contained an error in Author's affiliation on 13 page. The authors apologize for any inconvenience this mistake may have caused.

2.
Korean Journal of Anesthesiology ; : 13-16, 2015.
Article in English | WPRIM | ID: wpr-73847

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Total oxygen consumption has been found to be reduced under deep neuromuscular blockade due to a lower rate of metabolism of skeletal muscles. However, the magnitude of this effect in individual muscles has not been investigated. Thus the aim of this study was to compare the oxygenation of paralyzed versus non-paralyzed forearm muscle under tourniquet-provoked ischemia. METHODS: After ethics approval and written informed consent, 30 patients scheduled for elective hand and wrist surgery were included. Ischemia was provoked by inflation of bilateral upper arm tourniquets and muscle relaxation was achieved via intravenous administration of rocuronium 0.9 mg/kg. Bilateral tourniquets were applied to both upper arms before induction of anesthesia and near infrared spectrometry (NIRS) electrodes applied on both forearms. Muscular ischemia in an isolated (= non-paralyzed, NP) as well as a paralyzed forearm (P) was created by sequential inflation of both tourniquets before and after intravenous administration of rocuronium. Muscle oxygen saturations (SmO2) of NIRS in both forearms and their changes were determined and compared. RESULTS: Data of 30 patients (15 male, 15 female; 41.8 +/- 14.7 years) were analyzed. The speed of SmO2 decrease (50% decrease of SmO2 from baseline (median [percentiles]: NP 210 s [180/480s] vs. P 180 [180/300]) as well as the maximum decrease in SmO2 (minimum SmO2 in % (median [percentiles]: NP 20 [19/24] vs. P 21 [19/28]) were not significantly affected by neuromuscular paralysis. CONCLUSIONS: No significant effect of muscle relaxation on NIRS-assessed muscle oxygenation under tourniquet-induced ischemia was found in human forearm muscles.


Subject(s)
Female , Humans , Male , Administration, Intravenous , Anesthesia , Arm , Electrodes , Ethics , Forearm , Hand , Inflation, Economic , Informed Consent , Ischemia , Metabolism , Muscle Relaxation , Muscle, Skeletal , Muscles , Neuromuscular Blockade , Oxygen Consumption , Oxygen , Paralysis , Prospective Studies , Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared , Spectrum Analysis , Tourniquets , Wrist
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