View clinical trials related to Anesthesia Complication.
Filter by:Background: Recommendations for peri-operative management in patients with implanted cardiac electronic devices (CIED) are often based on older data from case reports and small collectives. Objective: To evaluate the peri-operative management and outcome of patients with implanted CIED undergoing non-CIED related surgery or catheter-interventional procedures in clinical routine. Study design: bi-center, non-randomized, observational registry, retrospective data-collection, on-going prospective patient enrollment, descriptive statistics Primary endpoint: number and type of peri-operative adverse device related events (ADE) Secondary endpoints: pre-interventional data (patient characteristics, data from CIED interrogation); peri-interventional data (type of surgery/intervention, anesthesiology techniques, any AE), postinterventional data (data from post-interventional CIED interrogation, need for reprogramming / device revision). Inclusion criteria: implanted CIED, non-CIED related surgical or catheter-based intervention, peri-procedural CIED interrogation, age >18 years Exclusion criteria: no implanted CIED, no data from any peri-procedural CIED interrogation available Patient enrollment: retrospectively beginning from 2008, further on-going prospective inclusion Sample size: For the observational study, there is no pre-specified sample size. Data from more than 500 patients undergoing > 700 interventions are expected.
Muscle relaxants are routinely applied during anesthesia to facilitate endotracheal intubation and to improve surgical working conditions. Several investigations have shown that a deep neuromuscular block (NMB) improves the surgical working conditions over a moderate NMB and effectively precludes sudden deterioration of the surgical field. However, whether the improvement of surgical working conditions translates into less intra- and postoperative complications remains uncertain. Small prospective or retrospective studies shown an decrease of the incidence of intraoperative adverse events and postoperative complications after a deep NMB. There is a need to confirm these outcome data prospectively, in a large number of patients and clinics and during a variety of surgical procedures.
Maintenance of a remifentanil infusion during anesthetic emergence has been reported to decrease the incidence of coughing and thereby help to ensure a smooth emergence. It may, however, cause respiratory depression and possibly delay emergence. The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of different dose of dexmedetomidine infusion on cough suppression during emergence from general anesthesia in patients undergoing thyroid surgery. American Society of Anesthesiologists physical status I-II adults undergoing elective thyroidectomy under general anesthesia are recruited and randomly allocated to receive dexmedetomidine iv infusion of 0.2μg·kg-1·h-1 (Group D1, n = 100), 0.5μg·kg-1·h-1 (Group D2, n = 100), 0.7μg·kg-1·h-1 (Group D3, n = 100) or saline (Group C, n = 100). Primary outcome is the incidence of coughing during emergence. Second outcomes include severity of coughing, which is assessed using a four-point scale; Ramsay score, Bruggrmann comfort scale score, VAS pain score are recorded. The respiratory rate (RR), heart rate (HR), and mean arterial pressure are also recorded.