Posts Tagged ‘Sevoflurane

This pilot study attempted to determine whether sevoflurane as a sole agent could be used as a deep sedative agent for minor surgical procedures in healthy young adults. Additionally, the quality of the sedation and the vital signs changes were compared with a common intravenous technique used by most dentist anesthesiologists and in many hospital [...]

Twenty-four patients were initially enrolled in the study. One patient, a 25-year-old, 80-kg woman, developed nausea after 2 minutes of sevoflurane administration at a final vaporizer setting of 0.5%. After 3 to 4 minutes, her feeling of nausea subsided. The patient was withdrawn from the study. A conscious sedation was then planned and 10 mg [...]

After approval from the Ohio State University Human Subjects Review Committee, 24 patients (17 women and 7 men) were enrolled in the study. All patients were American Society of Anesthesiologists (ASA) Physical Status I or II and between 18 and 40 years of age. Patients who were currently using benzodiazepines, antidepressants, or long-term analgesics were [...]

The use of the conscious inhalation sedative nitrous oxide has a long history of success and safety in the dental office provided that supplemental oxygen is administered. Nitrous oxide-oxygen inhalation sedation has a rapid onset and recovery, provides varying degrees of analgesia, and has minimal respiratory, cardiovascular, and other adverse effects. This is likely the [...]

DISCUSSION
This study confirms the sensitivity of BIS monitoring for sevoflurane at the highest concentration studied, 0.8% inspired sevoflurane with average BIS depression from the 90s into the 80s. Overall, BIS functioned without any noticeable problems in a dental setting without a procedure being performed. At light levels of sedation, EMG activity, including eye motion, did [...]

Demographic characteristics of the 22 subjects appear in Table 2. The ratio of males to females was 12 to 10, with a mean age of 29 ± 7 years and average weight of 159 ± 36 lb. Data for vital signs appear in Table 3, expressed as means ± standard errors for the combined control [...]

With the approval of The Ohio State University IRB Human Subjects Committee, 22 healthy volunteer dental students, both male and female, were recruited in pairs to participate in a single-blinded clinical protocol. A power analysis was performed on data from previous similar studies and indicated that an N (least significantnumber) greater than 15 should provide [...]

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Blog invites submissions of review articles, reports on clinical techniques, case reports, conference summaries, and articles of opinion pertinent to the control of pain and anxiety in dentistry.

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