collection
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21562423/rocuronium-for-rapid-sequence-induction-in-morbidly-obese-patients-a-prospective-study-for-evaluation-of-intubation-conditions-after-administration-1-2-mg-kg%C3%A2-%C3%A2-ideal-body-weight-of-rocuronium
#1
LETTER
Tomasz M Gaszynski, Tomasz Szewczyk
No abstract text is available yet for this article.
August 2011: European Journal of Anaesthesiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21148651/dose-adjustment-of-anaesthetics-in-the-morbidly-obese
#2
REVIEW
J Ingrande, H J M Lemmens
Anaesthesiologists must be prepared to deal with pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic (PD) differences in morbidly obese individuals. As drug administration based on total body weight can result in overdose, weight-based dosing scalars must be considered. Conversely, administration of drugs based on ideal body weight can result in a sub-therapeutic dose. Changes in cardiac output and alterations in body composition affect the distribution of numerous anaesthetic drugs. With the exception of neuromuscular antagonists, lean body weight is the optimal dosing scalar for most drugs used in anaesthesia including opioids and anaesthetic induction agents...
December 2010: British Journal of Anaesthesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19690247/should-dosing-of-rocuronium-in-obese-patients-be-based-on-ideal-or-corrected-body-weight
#3
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
Christian S Meyhoff, Jørgen Lund, Morten T Jenstrup, Casper Claudius, Anne M Sørensen, Jørgen Viby-Mogensen, Lars S Rasmussen
BACKGROUND: Pharmacokinetic studies in obese patients suggest that dosing of rocuronium should be based on ideal body weight (IBW). This may, however, result in a prolonged onset time or compromised conditions for tracheal intubation. In this study, we compared onset time, conditions for tracheal intubation, and duration of action in obese patients when the intubation dose of rocuronium was based on three different weight corrections. METHODS: Fifty-one obese patients, with a median (range) body mass index of 44 (34-72) kg/m2, scheduled for laparoscopic gastric banding or gastric bypass under propofol-remifentanil anesthesia were randomized into three groups...
September 2009: Anesthesia and Analgesia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15255794/what-is-the-best-size-descriptor-to-use-for-pharmacokinetic-studies-in-the-obese
#4
REVIEW
Bruce Green, Stephen B Duffull
The prevalence of obesity in the western world is dramatically rising, with many of these individuals requiring therapeutic intervention for a variety of disease states. Despite the growing prevalence of obesity there is a paucity of information describing how doses should be adjusted, or indeed whether they need to be adjusted, in the clinical setting. This review is aimed at identifying which descriptors of body size provide the most information about the relationship between dose and concentration in the obese...
August 2004: British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
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