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Induction of Anesthesia with Sevoflurane, Nitrous Oxide, and Oxygen
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1993
Year
Nitrous OxideHeart FailureAnaesthetic AgentVsrii GroupMedicinePatient SafetyAnesthesia PracticeVcrii TechniqueOxygen TherapyAnesthesiaPerioperative MedicineCardiologyEmergency MedicineAnesthesiology
In this study, the vital capacity rapid inhalation induction of anesthesia (VCRII) technique and the conventional spontaneous inhalation induction technique, each using 4.5% sevoflurane in nitrous oxide and oxygen, were compared. The VSRII group (n = 32) and conventional group (n = 32) were each tested on unpremeditated volunteers. VCRII required only half the time of conventional inhalation induction (54 s and 108 s, respectively), and was not associated with cardiovascular instability. Each of the two techniques was found acceptable by most of the volunteers studied (more than 80%). However, sevoflurane is best used with the VCRII technique because VCRII resulted in fewer excitement movements that could lead to severe complications and pronounced excitement.