Intravenous opioids reduce airway irritation during induction of anaesthesia with desflurane in adults
- PMID: 11103175
- DOI: 10.1093/bja/85.3.364
Intravenous opioids reduce airway irritation during induction of anaesthesia with desflurane in adults
Abstract
Desflurane is not used for the induction of anaesthesia despite its favourable pharmacokinetic characteristics because it causes airway irritation. We investigated whether pretreatment with i.v. narcotics reduced unwanted effects. One hundred and eighty adults were randomized to three groups (60 per group) to receive i.v. saline, fentanyl 1 microgram kg-1 and morphine 0.1 mg kg-1, respectively, before inhalational induction with desflurane in nitrous oxide and oxygen. Mean time to loss of response to commands was 4.0 min, without significant differences between groups. The incidence of coughing was greater (25%) in the control group than in the fentanyl (5.0%) and morphine groups (8.3%). The incidence of apnoea was 20.0% in the control group versus 13.3 and 5.0% in the fentanyl and morphine groups, respectively. Laryngospasm developed in 11.7% of controls compared with 3.3 and 1.7% in the fentanyl and morphine groups, respectively. More patients in the control group had excitatory movements (46.7%) than in the fentanyl (16.7%) and morphine (8.3%) groups. These results demonstrate that i.v. opioids reduce airway irritability significantly during inhalational induction with desflurane in adults.
Comment in
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Use of intravenous opioids to reduce airway irritation during induction of anaesthesia with desflurane.Br J Anaesth. 2001 Apr;86(4):599-600. Br J Anaesth. 2001. PMID: 11573648 No abstract available.
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Intravenous opioids reduce airway irritation during induction of anaesthesia with desflurane in adults.Br J Anaesth. 2001 Jan;86(1):149-50. doi: 10.1093/bja/86.1.3. Br J Anaesth. 2001. PMID: 11575399 No abstract available.
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