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Ventilation and the oculocardiac reflex

22

Citations

11

References

1986

Year

Abstract

A randomised prospective study was carried out in children undergoing surgery for squint correction, to determine the value of controlled ventilation as a prophylaxis against the occurrence of the oculocardiac reflex. One hundred patients anaesthetised with nitrous oxide/oxygen and halothane were randomly assigned to either ventilated or spontaneously breathing groups of 50 each. Half the patients in each group received glycopyrronium 7.5 micrograms/kg intravenously at the time of induction of anaesthesia. Heart rate, rhythm, blood pressure and end tidal CO2 concentration were monitored throughout. A positive oculocardiac reflex, defined as a fall in heart rate of 20% or more and/or the occurrence of dysrhythmias, was observed in 72% of spontaneously breathing patients and in 100% of ventilated patients not receiving prophylactic intravenous glycopyrronium. The incidence of a positive reflex in patients receiving glycopyrronium was 10% (4 and 16% respectively in spontaneously breathing and ventilated patients). It is concluded that controlled ventilation is of no value as a preventive measure against the occurrence of the oculocardiac reflex in patients undergoing squint surgery and that prophylaxis is safely achieved with the use of intravenous glycopyrronium.

References

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