P C Rutter's research while affiliated with Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and other places
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Publications (3)
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945
Forty-five patients who had undergone major operations were given a slow intravenous injection of morphine sulphate (1 mg/ml saline) until their pain was relieved and were then randomly divided into three equal groups to receive different regimens of morphine sulphate over the next 72 hours. Patients in group A received 3.5 times the pain-relieving...
Citations
... In our unit, an intravenous opioid infusion supplemented with anti-inflammatory analgesics is the most common type of postoperative management regime used. Pethidine was the drug of choice and was used in a fixed dose of 10 mg/h, irrespective of the weight and individual demand of the patient [11]. Described a regularly controlled infusion of pethidine at a rate of 0.3 mg/kg/h. ...