Literature DB >> 7512679

Incidence and clinical importance of perioperative histamine release: randomised study of volume loading and antihistamines after induction of anaesthesia. Trial Group Mainz/Marburg.

W Lorenz1, D Duda, W Dick, H Sitter, A Doenicke, A Black, D Weber, H Menke, B Stinner, T Junginger.   

Abstract

Although histamine release is recognised as a common event during anaesthesia and surgery, few clinicians judge the resultant cardiorespiratory disturbances serious enough to warrant prophylaxis with antihistamines. We have assessed the incidence and importance of histamine release in a randomised 2 x 2 factorial study. 240 patients representing a routine throughput of major general surgery were studied during a standardised induction of anaesthesia and preoperative loading of the circulation with either Ringer solution or Haemaccel-35, with or without antihistamine prophylaxis with dimetindene (H1) plus cimetidine (H2). Cardiorespiratory disturbances were graded as detectable, clinically relevant, or life-threatening from observers' records of the anaesthesia and the actions taken by the anaesthetists. Disturbances that were accompanied by significant rises in plasma histamine were further designated histamine-related, and those that were not were designated histamine-unrelated. Anaesthetists, observers, and designators were blinded to whether or not the patients had received antihistamines and to which solution was used for circulatory volume loading. Clinically relevant or life-threatening histamine-related disturbances occurred in 8% of the patients who after induction of anaesthesia received Ringer without antihistamines, in 26% of those who received Haemaccel without antihistamines, and in 2% or less of those who received antihistamines (p < or = 0.0001). There were 4 life-threatening histamine-related disturbances, all in patients who received Haemaccel without antihistamines (p < 0.01). Histamine-unrelated disturbances occurred in 16% overall, with no obvious effect of Haemaccel or antihistamines. The histamine-related disturbances under anaesthesia were remarkable for their severity (even with small rises in histamine concentrations), for the prevalence of bradycardia, and for the absence of skin signs. Their likelihood and severity were increased in patients with tumours. The results of the trial make a case for routine prophylaxis with antihistamines as part of anaesthetic management.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7512679     DOI: 10.1016/s0140-6736(94)90063-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Lancet        ISSN: 0140-6736            Impact factor:   79.321


  20 in total

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2.  Drug-induced anaphylaxis : case/non-case study based on an italian pharmacovigilance database.

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3.  Evaluation of the McPeek postoperative outcome score in three trials.

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4.  Models with clinically-relevant and life-threatening histamine-related cardiovascular disturbances: evaluation of the clinical effectiveness of H1/H2-histamine receptor antagonists in perioperative histamine release.

Authors:  M Künneke; B Stinner; D Duda; C Hasse; W Lorenz
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Review 5.  Therapeutic controversies in the management of acute anaphylaxis.

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6.  Flurbiprofen axetil provides a prophylactic benefit against mesenteric traction syndrome associated with remifentanil infusion during laparotomy.

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7.  Potentiation of vancomycin-induced histamine release by muscle relaxants and morphine in rats.

Authors:  H Shuto; M Sueyasu; S Otsuki; T Hara; Y Tsuruta; Y Kataoka; R Oishi
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8.  Model building strategies for risk analysis of perioperative histamine-related cardiorespiratory disturbances.

Authors:  H Sitter; B Stinner; D Duda; H Menke; W Lorenz
Journal:  Inflamm Res       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 4.575

9.  Antibiotics change contractility of guinea pig aorta and trachea to histamine after a short exposure to LPS.

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Journal:  Inflamm Res       Date:  1995-04       Impact factor: 4.575

Review 10.  Aprotinin. A review of its pharmacology and therapeutic efficacy in reducing blood loss associated with cardiac surgery.

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