| Literature DB >> 1642911 |
J R Sneyd1, D Y Wang, D Edwards, C J Pomfrett, B R Doran, T E Healy, B J Pollard.
Abstract
Auditory evoked response (AER) was recorded before, during and after physiotherapy in 11 paralysed (atracurium 0.56 (SD) 0.13 mg kg-1 h-1), sedated (propofol 2.2 (1.0) mg kg-1 h-1; fentanyl 4.4 (2.3) micrograms kg-1 h-1) and critically ill patients undergoing ventilation in the intensive care unit (ICU). The latency of the negative wave, NB, was reduced by physiotherapy (mean 44.8 (SD) 7.9 ms before, 41.0 (6.8) ms during (P less than 0.01, non-parametric Friedman test) and 45.6 (6.3) ms after physiotherapy); NB amplitude showed no consistent change (-0.81 (1.4) microV, -0.81 (1.5) microV and -0.71 (1.3) microV, respectively). NB latency responded to patient arousal at constant levels of sedation and this requires further evaluation as a means of monitoring sedation in paralysed patients in the ICU.Entities:
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Year: 1992 PMID: 1642911 DOI: 10.1093/bja/68.4.349
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Anaesth ISSN: 0007-0912 Impact factor: 9.166