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ID 119224
Author
Kawano, Hiroaki National Hospital Organization Zentsuji Hospital|Tokushima Prefectural Central Hospital
Manabe, Sawa Kagawa National Children’s Hospital
Matsumoto, Tomomi National Hospital Organization Zentsuji Hospital
Hamaguchi, Eisuke National Hospital Organization Zentsuji Hospital KAKEN Search Researchers
Tada, Fumihiko Kagawa National Children’s Hospital
Keywords
Intraoperative blood loss
Remifentanil
Hemodynamics
Fentanyl
Spinal surgery
General anesthesia
Content Type
Journal Article
Description
Background: Remifentanil enhances intraoperative hemodynamic stability, suggesting that it may decrease intraoperative blood loss when included as an adjuvant to general anesthesia. This retrospective study compared intraoperative blood loss during spinal surgery in patients administered either remifentanil or fentanyl as an opioid adjuvant.
Methods: We reviewed clinical and surgical data from 64 consecutive laminoplasty or laminectomy patients treated at National Hospital Organization Zentsuji Hospital between April 2010 and March 2011. Patients received either remifentanil (n = 35) or fentanyl (n = 29) as an opioid analgesic during general anesthesia. In addition to intraoperative blood loss, indices of hemodynamic stability, including heart rate as well as systolic, mean, and diastolic blood pressure (BP), were compared over the entire perioperative period between remifentanil and fentanyl groups.
Results: The remifentanil group exhibited significantly lower intraoperative arterial BP than the fentanyl group. Intraoperative blood loss was also significantly lower in the remifentanil group (125 ± 67 mL vs. 165 ± 82 mL, P =0.035).
Conclusions: Intraoperative blood loss during spinal surgery was decreased in patients who received remifentanil as an opioid adjuvant, possibly because of lower intraoperative BP. A larger-scale prospective randomized controlled trial is warranted to confirm our results and to test whether remifentanil can decrease intraoperative blood loss during other surgical procedures.
Journal Title
BMC Anesthesiology
ISSN
14712253
NCID
AA12034694
Publisher
BioMed Central|Springer Nature
Volume
13
Start Page
46
Published Date
2013-12-05
Rights
This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
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DOI (Published Version)
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language
eng
TextVersion
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departments
Medical Sciences
University Hospital