학술논문

Derivation and prospective testing of a two-step sevoflurane-O2-N2O low fresh gas flow sequence.
Document Type
Journal Article
Source
Anaesthesia & Intensive Care. Nov2009, Vol. 37 Issue 6, p911-917. 7p.
Subject
Language
ISSN
0310-057X
Abstract
Simple vaporiser setting (F(D)) and fresh gas flow (FGF) sequences make the practice of low-flow anaesthesia not only possible but also easy to achieve. We sought to derive a sevoflurane F(D) sequence that maintains the end-expired sevoflurane concentration (F(A)sevo) at 1.3% using the fewest possible number of F(D) adjustments with a previously described O2-N2O FGF sequence that allows early FGF reduction to 0.7 l min(-1). In 18 ASA physical status I to IH patients, F(D) was determined to maintain F(A)sevo at 1.3% with 2 l min(-1) O2 and 4 l min(-1) N2O FGF for three minutes, and with 0.3 and 0.4 l min(-1) thereafter. Using the same FGF sequence, the F(D) schedule that approached the 1.3% F(A)sevo pattern with the fewest possible adjustments was prospectively tested in another 18 patients. The following F(D) sequence approximated the F(D) course well: 2% from zero to three minutes, 2.6% from three to 15 minutes and 2.0% after 15 minutes. When prospectively tested, median (25th; 75th percentile) performance error was 0.8 (-2.9; 5.9)%, absolute performance error 6.7 (3.3; 10.6)%, divergence 18.2 (-5.6; 27.4)%.h(-1) and wobble 4.4 (1.7; 8.1) %. In one patient, FGF had to be temporarily increased for four minutes. One O2/N2O rotameter FGF setting change from 6 to 0.7 l min(-1) at three minutes and two sevoflurane F(D) changes at three and 15 minutes maintained predictable anaesthetic gas concentrations during the first 45 minutes in all but one patient in our study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]