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Lidocaine versus Dexmedetomidine as an adjuvant to General Anesthesia for patients undergoing Elective Abdominopelvic Surgeries

Article

Last updated: 04 Jan 2025

Subjects

-

Tags

Surgery

Abstract

Background: The fundamental impact of dexmedetomidine on the cardiovascular framework obstruction is the extra component of narcotic saving impact. Similarly, fundamental Lidocaine that is utilized as a consistent mixture during the operation period has pain-relieving, antihyperalgesic, and calming chattels. 
Aim of the work: To analyze the effectiveness of lidocaine given intravenously with that of dexmedetomidine as an adjuvant to general anesthesia for candidates listed for elective abdominal and pelvic surgery.
Patients and Methods:120 patients of both sexes undergoing elective pelviabdominal procedures were enlisted. Patients were assigned randomly to one of three equal groups: group 1 received a loading lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg, followed by an infusion of 2 mg/kg/h, group 2 received a loading dexmedetomidine1 μg/kg, followed by 0.5 μg/kg/h, and group 3 received normal saline 0.9% in the same design as previous medicines. Hemodynamics, consumption of anesthetic agents, induction and recovery times, and time to the first postoperative analgesic request were reported.
Results: The hemodynamics after intubation and in the next records, were significantly lower in groups 1 and 2 when compared with group 3 with no significant variance between groups 2 and 1. The induction dosage of propofol, mean end-tidal sevoflurane concentration and the consumption of fentanyl intraoperatively were significantly lower in group 2 when compared with group 1. The time through anesthesia induction was significantly lower in group 1 and 2 when compared with group 3. The time to the first analgesic demand postoperatively was significantly longer in group 2 when compared with group 1.
Conclusion: Both lidocaine and dexmedetomidine could be a beneficial adjuvant to general anesthesia. Though, dexmedetomidine has a much economic effect on intraoperative anesthetic agent consumption and more extended time to the first postoperative analgesic request. 

DOI

10.21608/ijma.2020.23550.1096

Keywords

Abdominopelvic surgeries, general anesthesia, Dexmedetomidine, Lidocaine, Adjuvant

Authors

First Name

Sameh

Last Name

Seyam

MiddleName

-

Affiliation

Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, Faculty of Medicine, Al-Azhar University, Egypt; Mustasharak Hospital, Khamis Mushayt, Asir province, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia [KSA].

Email

sameh_icu1@yahoo.com

City

khamis mushayt

Orcid

-

Volume

2

Article Issue

2

Related Issue

13522

Issue Date

2020-04-01

Receive Date

2020-02-05

Publish Date

2020-04-01

Page Start

427

Page End

435

Print ISSN

2636-4174

Online ISSN

2682-3780

Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/article_78929.html

Detail API

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/service?article_code=78929

Order

14

Type

Original Article

Type Code

816

Publication Type

Journal

Publication Title

International Journal of Medical Arts

Publication Link

https://ijma.journals.ekb.eg/

MainTitle

Lidocaine versus Dexmedetomidine as an adjuvant to General Anesthesia for patients undergoing Elective Abdominopelvic Surgeries

Details

Type

Article

Created At

22 Jan 2023