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1.
Anaesthesia ; 66(12): 1112-20, 2011 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21950720

RESUMEN

We developed a closed-loop system to control the depth of anaesthesia and neuromuscular blockade using the bispectral index and the electromyogram simultaneously and evaluated the clinical performance of this combined system for general anaesthesia. Twenty-two adult patients were included in this study. Anaesthesia was induced by a continuous infusion of remifentanil at 0.4 µg.kg(-1) .min(-1) (induction dose) and then 0.25 µg.kg(-1) .min(-1) (maintenance dose) and propofol at 2 mg.kg(-1) 3 min later. The combined automatic control was started 2 min after tracheal intubation. The depth of anaesthesia was recorded using bispectral index monitoring using a target value of 40. The target value of neuromuscular blockade, using mivacurium, was a T1/T1(0) twitch height of 10%. The precision of the system was calculated using internationally defined performance parameters. Twenty patients were included in the data analysis. The mean (SD) duration of simultaneous control was 129 (69) min. No human intervention was necessary during the computer-controlled administration of propofol and mivacurium. All patients assessed the quality of anaesthesia as 'good' to 'very good'; there were no episodes of awareness. The mean (SD) median performance error, median absolute performance error and wobble for the control of depth of anaesthesia and for neuromuscular blockade were -0.31 (1.78), 6.76 (3.45), 6.32 (2.93) and -0.38 (1.68), 3.75 (4.83), 3.63 (4.69), respectively. The simultaneous closed-loop system using propofol and mivacurium was able to maintain the target values with a high level of precision in a clinical setting.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia/métodos , Bloqueo Neuromuscular/métodos , Adulto , Electroencefalografía , Femenino , Humanos , Isoquinolinas/farmacología , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Mivacurio , Propofol/farmacología
3.
Eur J Anaesthesiol ; 23(1): 23-30, 2006 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16390561

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Despite the introduction of various less-invasive concepts of cardiac output measurement, pulmonary arterial thermodilution is still the most common measurement technique. METHODS: This prospective controlled study was designed to compare different methods of cardiac output measurement simultaneously. Pulmonary arterial thermodilution, transpulmonary thermodilution (PiCCO), trans-oesophageal echo-Doppler probe (HemoSonic) and partial carbon dioxide rebreathing technique (NICO monitor) were evaluated against a peri-aortic transit-time flow-probe as reference method in a clinically relevant animal model. After approval from the Local Ethics Committee on Animal Research, the investigations were conducted in nine anesthetized domestic pigs. Systemic haemodynamics were modulated systematically by the application of catecholamines, caval occlusion and exsanguination. Statistical analysis was performed with Bland-Altman and linear regression. RESULTS: A total of 366 paired cardiac output measurements were carried out at a reference cardiac output between 0.5 and 7 L min(-1). The correlation coefficients for pulmonary arterial and transpulmonary thermodilution against reference were 0.93 and 0.95, for trans-oesophageal Doppler and partial rebreathing technique 0.84 and 0.77. Pulmonary arterial thermodilution and transpulmonary thermodilution showed comparable bias and limits of agreement. Where HemoSonic showed an overestimation of cardiac output at a higher precision, NICO overestimated low and underestimated higher cardiac output values. CONCLUSIONS: Our data suggest that pulmonary arterial thermodilution and PiCCO may be interchangeably used for cardiac output measurement even under acute haemodynamic changes. The method described by Bland and Altman demonstrated an overestimation of cardiac output for both thermodilution methods. HemoSonic and NICO offer non-invasive alternatives and complementary monitoring tools in numerous clinical situations. Trend monitoring and haemodynamic optimizing can be applied sufficiently, when absolute measures are judged critically in a clinical context. The use of the NICO system seems to be limited during acute circulatory changes.


Asunto(s)
Gasto Cardíaco/fisiología , Hemodinámica/fisiología , Algoritmos , Animales , Dióxido de Carbono , Cateterismo de Swan-Ganz , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Pulmón/diagnóstico por imagen , Análisis de Regresión , Porcinos , Termodilución , Ultrasonografía
4.
Ther Apher ; 5(5): 423-32, 2001 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11778929

RESUMEN

Neutrophils are critical effector cells in humoral and innate immunity and play a vital role in phagocytosis and bacterial killing. If they and/or their specific functions are lacking, then immunoparalysis may occur, and severe diseases like systemic inflammatory response syndrome (SIRS) or sepsis can take a fatal course. In this paper, we discuss the possibility of using preconditioned cells in an extracorporeal biohybrid immune support system. A human promyelocytic cell line was stimulated for different times with all-trans retinoic acid. The resulting cells displayed major signs and functions of mature neutrophilic granulocytes including oxygen radical production, phagocytosis of living and dead Escherichia coli, Staphylococcus aureus, Candida albicans, intracellular killing, and interleukin production. The cells can be expanded to yield a sufficient cell mass, and subsequent prestimulation results in an expression of specific neutrophil functions. Extracorporeal bioreactor experiments seem to be feasible to test the benefit in immunoparalysis-associated diseases like SIRS or sepsis.


Asunto(s)
Circulación Extracorporea/métodos , Fagocitos/inmunología , Sepsis/terapia , Reactores Biológicos , Candida albicans/inmunología , Citocinas/biosíntesis , Escherichia coli/inmunología , Células HL-60/inmunología , Humanos , Técnicas In Vitro , Fagocitosis/inmunología , Sepsis/inmunología
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