Evaluation of the Muscles Pain Post General Anesthesia for Patients Who Inductions Succemethenium

Authors

  • Khalid Salih Omar Almismary Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Derna, Derna, Libya
  • Najah Ahmeda Ibrahim Husayn Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, College of Medical Technology, Derna, Libya

Keywords:

Muscles, Anesthesia, Succemethenium, Surgery

Abstract

The aim is to Evaluation the Muscle Pain post general anesthesia for patients who induction succemethenium, Material, and Methods: The design of the study is descriptive, using a convenience sample of twenty diabetic patients (20) who were going to Operation Theater.  Patients included in this study have the following criteria: 1. Be alert and be able to communicate verbally. 2. They are induction suxamethonium, Result: surgery, (27.8%) of patients went to the O.T. for cesarean section and cholecystectomy, respectively. Hysterectomy and laparotomy had the same percentage (11.1%). Just three patients went to the O.T. for an appendectomy. In relation to the duration of surgery, exactly one-half of the studied sample took two hours to finish the surgery, while just two patients consumed one hour, on the other hand, more than one-tenth of eighteen patients needed three hours to finish the surgery. Two-thirds (61.1%) of patients were administered ketamine as induction, and a majority (1889.9%) of patients were administered thiopental. While the majority (88.9%) of all the studied patients were administered the protocol.  All patients were administered N2O and muscle relaxants as maintenance; one-half (50.0%) of patients were given ISO. of temperature; 72% of patients had a normal temperature at the first hour of surgery, and at the end of the second hour, the temperature was falling between 34 and 36 c. In the third hour, the percentage is still as in the second hour, Conclusion is that sincere efforts are required to find the efficacy of a technique that could significantly reduce the undesirable side effects of succinylcholine in order to curtail the valuable hospital costs being spent on the health of the patients in our poor country.

 

 

Author Biographies

Khalid Salih Omar Almismary, Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine, University of Derna, Derna, Libya

 

 

Najah Ahmeda Ibrahim Husayn, Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care, College of Medical Technology, Derna, Libya

 

 

Dimensions

Published

2023-05-23

How to Cite

Khalid Salih Omar Almismary, & Najah Ahmeda Ibrahim Husayn. (2023). Evaluation of the Muscles Pain Post General Anesthesia for Patients Who Inductions Succemethenium. African Journal of Advanced Pure and Applied Sciences (AJAPAS), 2(2), `181–190. Retrieved from https://aaasjournals.com/index.php/ajapas/article/view/363