Low-flow anaesthesia. 1995

J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
Department of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, Hospital St. Elisabeth-Stift, Damme, Germany.

Although many anaesthesia machines are equipped with circle rebreathing systems, inhalational anaesthesia remains frequently performed using relatively high fresh-gas flows. The major advantages of rebreathing techniques can be achieved only if the fresh-gas flow is reduced to 1 l.min-1 or less. Although there are potential risks associated with low-flow anaesthesia, modern anaesthesia machines meet all the technical requirements for the safe use of low-flow techniques if they are used in conjunction with equipment for monitoring inhaled and exhaled gas concentrations; these monitors are already increasingly available and, in the near future, are likely to become an obligatory safety standard in many countries. For both economic and ecological reasons, the use of new inhalational anaesthetics, with low tissue solubility and low anaesthetic potency, can be justified only if the efficiency of administration is optimised by using low-flow anaesthetic techniques.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D004787 Environmental Pollution Contamination of the air, bodies of water, or land with substances that are harmful to human health and the environment. Pollution, Environmental,Soil Pollution,Pollution, Soil
D006801 Humans Members of the species Homo sapiens. Homo sapiens,Man (Taxonomy),Human,Man, Modern,Modern Man
D000764 Anesthesia, Closed-Circuit Inhalation anesthesia where the gases exhaled by the patient are rebreathed as some carbon dioxide is simultaneously removed and anesthetic gas and oxygen are added so that no anesthetic escapes into the room. Closed-circuit anesthesia is used especially with explosive anesthetics to prevent fires where electrical sparking from instruments is possible. Anesthesia, Rebreathing,Closed-Circuit Anesthesia,Anesthesia, Closed Circuit,Anesthesias, Closed-Circuit,Anesthesias, Rebreathing,Closed Circuit Anesthesia,Closed-Circuit Anesthesias,Rebreathing Anesthesia,Rebreathing Anesthesias
D000860 Hypoxia Sub-optimal OXYGEN levels in the ambient air of living organisms. Anoxia,Oxygen Deficiency,Anoxemia,Deficiency, Oxygen,Hypoxemia,Deficiencies, Oxygen,Oxygen Deficiencies
D018685 Anesthetics, Inhalation Gases or volatile liquids that vary in the rate at which they induce anesthesia; potency; the degree of circulation, respiratory, or neuromuscular depression they produce; and analgesic effects. Inhalation anesthetics have advantages over intravenous agents in that the depth of anesthesia can be changed rapidly by altering the inhaled concentration. Because of their rapid elimination, any postoperative respiratory depression is of relatively short duration. (From AMA Drug Evaluations Annual, 1994, p173) Inhalation Anesthetic,Inhalation Anesthetics,Anesthetic Gases,Anesthetic, Inhalation,Gases, Anesthetic

Related Publications

J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
September 1996, European journal of anaesthesiology,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
March 2018, Indian journal of anaesthesia,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
November 2009, Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
April 2010, Journal of clinical monitoring and computing,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
March 2011, British journal of anaesthesia,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
June 1997, Canadian journal of anaesthesia = Journal canadien d'anesthesie,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
October 1988, Acta anaesthesiologica Scandinavica,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
September 2005, Best practice & research. Clinical anaesthesiology,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
July 1999, British journal of anaesthesia,
J A Baum, and A R Aitkenhead
June 2017, Anaesthesia,
Copied contents to your clipboard!