collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30929307/the-society-for-pediatric-anesthesia-recommendations-for-the-use-of-opioids-in-children-during-the-perioperative-period
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph P Cravero, Rita Agarwal, Charles Berde, Patrick Birmingham, Charles J Coté, Jeffrey Galinkin, Lisa Isaac, Sabine Kost-Byerly, David Krodel, Lynne Maxwell, Terri Voepel-Lewis, Navil Sethna, Robert Wilder
Opioids have long held a prominent role in the management of perioperative pain in adults and children. Published reports concerning the appropriate, and inappropriate, use of these medications in pediatric patients have appeared in various publications over the last 50 years. For this document, the Society for Pediatric Anesthesia appointed a taskforce to evaluate the available literature and formulate recommendations with respect to the most salient aspects of perioperative opioid administration in children...
June 2019: Paediatric Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30857607/caudal-epidural-blocks-in-paediatric-patients-a-review-and-practical-considerations
#2
REVIEW
Marion Wiegele, Peter Marhofer, Per-Arne Lönnqvist
Caudal epidural blockade in children is one of the most widely administered techniques of regional anaesthesia. Recent clinical studies have answered major pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic questions, thus providing the scientific background for safe and effective blocks in daily clinical practice and demonstrating that patient selection can be expanded to range from extreme preterm births up to 50 kg of body weight. This narrative review discusses the main findings in the current literature with regard to patient selection (sub-umbilical vs mid-abdominal indications, contraindications, low-risk patients with spinal anomalies); anatomical considerations (access problems, age and body positioning, palpation for needle insertion); technical considerations (verification of needle position by ultrasound vs landmarks vs 'whoosh' or 'swoosh' testing); training and equipment requirements (learning curve, needle types, risk of tissue spreading); complications and safety (paediatric regional anaesthesia, caudal blocks); local anaesthetics (bupivacaine vs ropivacaine, risk of toxicity in children, management of toxic events); adjuvant drugs (clonidine, dexmedetomidine, opioids, ketamine); volume dosing (dermatomal reach, cranial rebound); caudally accessed lumbar or thoracic anaesthesia (contamination risk, verifying catheter placement); and postoperative pain...
April 2019: British Journal of Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/29148119/the-anatomy-of-the-pediatric-airway-has-our-knowledge-changed-in-120-years-a-review-of-historic-and-recent-investigations-of-the-anatomy-of-the-pediatric-larynx
#3
REVIEW
Josef Holzki, Karen A Brown, Robert G Carroll, Charles J Coté
BACKGROUND: There is disagreement regarding the anatomy of the pediatric airway, particularly regarding the shape of the cricoid cartilage and the location of the narrowest portion of the larynx. AIMS: The aim of this review is to clarify the origin and the science behind these differing views. METHODS: We undertook a review of published literature, University Libraries, and authoritative textbooks with key search words and phrases. RESULTS: In vivo observations suggest that the narrowest portion of the airway is more proximal than the cricoid cartilage...
January 2018: Paediatric Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19572839/anatomy-and-assessment-of-the-pediatric-airway
#4
REVIEW
Lola Adewale
Airway and respiratory complications are the most common causes of morbidity during general anesthesia in children. The airway changes in size, shape and position throughout its development from the neonate to the adult (1). Knowledge of the functional anatomy of the airway in children forms the basis of understanding the pathological conditions that may occur. This in turn allows a comprehensive assessment of the pediatric airway to take place, including a detailed medical history, clinical examination and specific investigative procedures...
July 2009: Paediatric Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/28952030/idiopathic-hyperckemia-and-malignant-hyperthermia-susceptibility
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joilson M Santos, Pamela V Andrade, Leonardo Galleni, Mariz Vainzof, Claudia F R Sobreira, Beny Schmidt, Acary S B Oliveira, José L G Amaral, Helga C A Silva
PURPOSE: HyperCKemia is a persistent rise in serum creatine kinase (CK) levels of at least 1.5 times the normal value, as evidenced by a minimum of two measurements at 30-day intervals. One of the neuromuscular diseases associated with hyperCKemia is malignant hyperthermia (MH). This study investigated the susceptibility to MH in patients with hyperCKemia via in vitro contracture testing (IVCT) and a search of mutations in the RYR1 gene. METHODS: Patients in an MH centre were followed from 1997-2012, and their epidemiologic, clinical, and laboratory data were analyzed, including IVCT, muscle histochemical analysis, and next-generation sequencing molecular analysis...
December 2017: Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30144235/innovative-peripheral-nerve-blocks-facilitated-by-ultrasound-guidance
#6
EDITORIAL
Adrian T Bosenberg
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 2018: Paediatric Anaesthesia
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