There was a lower incidence of ED after TIVA. Both intravenous and inhalational inductions were similarly well-tolerated. The use of TIVA was associated with reduced postoperative pain as measured using FLACC scores.
The Panda smartphone application can be used in lieu of the original FPS-R and CAS for assessment of pain in children. Children's preference for Panda may translate to improved cooperation with self-report of pain.
An educational intervention reduced the number of rA TTEs ordered by attending physicians in a variety of ambulatory care environments. This may prove to be an effective strategy to improve the use of imaging. (A Multi-Centered Feedback and Education Intervention Designed to Reduce Inappropriate Transthoracic Echocardiograms [Echo WISELY]; NCT02038101).
The ED50 of dexmedetomidine administered over 5 s without significant hemodynamic compromise is 0.49 mcg·kg(-1). Further work is needed to determine the 'safe' (ED5 or less) and effective dose for desired perioperative clinical outcomes.
We present a study evaluating two respiratory rate estimation algorithms using videos obtained from placing a finger on the camera lens of a mobile phone. The two algorithms, based on Smart Fusion and empirical mode decomposition (EMD), consist of previously developed signal processing methods to detect features and extract respiratory induced variations in photoplethysmographic signals to estimate respiratory rate. With custom-built software on an Android phone, photoplethysmographic imaging videos were recorded from 19 healthy adults while breathing spontaneously at respiratory rates between 6 to 32 breaths/min. Signals from two pulse oximeters were simultaneously recorded to compare the algorithms' performance using mobile phone data and clinical data. Capnometry was recorded to obtain reference respiratory rates. Two hundred seventy-two recordings were analyzed. The Smart Fusion algorithm reported 39 recordings with insufficient respiratory information from the photoplethysmographic imaging data. Of the 232 remaining recordings, a root mean square error (RMSE) of 6 breaths/min was obtained. The RMSE for the pulse oximeter data was lower at 2.3 breaths/min. RMSE for the EMD method was higher throughout all data sources as, unlike the Smart Fusion, the EMD method did not screen for inconsistent results. The study showed that it is feasible to estimate respiratory rates by placing a finger on a mobile phone camera, but that it becomes increasingly challenging at respiratory rates greater than 20 breaths/min, independent of data source or algorithm tested.
With optimized perioperative management, modern anesthesia for incidental surgery in patients with LQTS is safer than anecdotal case report literature might suggest. Our series suggests that the risk of perioperative TdP is concentrated in neonates and infants requiring urgent interventions after failed first-line management of LQTS.
A novel wavelet transform cardiorespiratory coherence (WTCRC) algorithm has been developed to measure the autonomic state. WTCRC may be used as a nociception index, ranging from 0 (no nociception, strong coherence) to 100 (strong nociception, low coherence). The aim of this study is to estimate the sensitivity of the algorithm to nociception (dental dam insertions) and antinociception (bolus doses of anesthetic drugs). WTCRC's sensitivity is compared to mean heart rate (HRmean) and mean non-invasive blood pressure (NIBPmean), which are commonly used clinical signs. Data were collected from 48 children receiving general anesthesia during dental surgery. The times of dental dam insertion and anesthetic bolus events were noted in real-time during surgeries. 42 dental dam insertion and 57 anesthetic bolus events were analyzed. The change in average WTCRC, HRmean, and NIBPmean was calculated between a baseline period before each event and a response period after. A Wilcoxon rank-sum test was used to compare changes. Dental dam insertion changed the WTCRC nociception index by an average of 14 (82 %) [95 % CI from 7.4 to 19], HRmean by 7.3 beats/min (8.1 %) [5.6-9.6], and NIBPmean by 8.3 mmHg (12 %) [4.9-13]. A bolus dose of anesthetics changed the WTCRC by -15 (-50 %) [-21 to -9.3], HRmean by -4.8 beats/min (4.6 %) [-6.6 to -2.9], and NIBPmean by -2.6 mmHg (3.4 %) [-4.7 to -0.50]. A nociception index based on cardiorespiratory coherence is more sensitive to nociception and antinociception than are HRmean or NIBPmean. The WTCRC algorithm shows promise for noninvasively monitoring nociception during general anesthesia.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.