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Current Opinion in Anaesthesiology, 1989
In recent years hospitals have begun to institute special postoperative pain services staffed by anesthesia department personnel. The charter for such services is to provide the best and most appropriate postoperative analgesia for surgical patients, in particular for the increasing numbers of patients who, released from hospital soon after surgery ...
E. Taylor, P. F. White, M. L. Urquhart
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In recent years hospitals have begun to institute special postoperative pain services staffed by anesthesia department personnel. The charter for such services is to provide the best and most appropriate postoperative analgesia for surgical patients, in particular for the increasing numbers of patients who, released from hospital soon after surgery ...
E. Taylor, P. F. White, M. L. Urquhart
+5 more sources
Postoperative Epidural Analgesia
Critical Care Nursing Clinics of North America, 1991Epidural analgesia is an important advance in the treatment of postoperative pain. Improved pain relief and decreased patient morbidity have combined to make this technique more desirable than the use of traditional intramuscular narcotics. Optimal patient care and satisfaction, however, can only be achieved with the education and assistance of ...
T R, Lubenow, A D, Ivankovich
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Ketorolac for early postoperative analgesia
Journal of Clinical Anesthesia, 1995To determine the efficacy and speed of onset of analgesia of a single dose of intravenous (IV) or intramuscular (IM) ketorolac tromethamine following major orthopedic surgery.Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial.A district general hospital in England.112 patients aged 18 to 80 years suffering moderate or severe pain following orthopedic ...
T J, Parke +4 more
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Postoperative Analgesia for Thoracotomy Patients
Anesthesia & Analgesia, 1975Severe postoperative pain, which may persist for up to 3 days and may lead to postoperative complications, due to the patient's inability to breathe deeply and cough, is frequently experienced in the area of the incision and chest tubes by thoracotomy patients.
J A, Kaplan, E D, Miller, E G, gallagher
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Postoperative Epidural Analgesia
Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1993Administration of epidural opioids is a technique that is currently being used by many veterinary anesthesiologists and surgeons to provide postoperative analgesia. The duration of analgesia is prolonged and the degree of sedation is much less than that which occurs with parenterally administered opioids and the risks appears to be minimal.
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