Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
Meeting Abstracts|
September 1988
BUPIVACAIME AND LIDOCAINE ARE MORE POTENT VASODILATORS THAN MEPIVACAINE: EFFECTS DETERMINED BY ANESTHETIC CONCENTRATION
Department of Anesthesiology, Virginia Mason Medical Center, Seattle, WA 98111
Anesthesiology September 1988, Vol. 69, A873.
Citation
R. L. Carpenter, R. C. Morell; BUPIVACAIME AND LIDOCAINE ARE MORE POTENT VASODILATORS THAN MEPIVACAINE: EFFECTS DETERMINED BY ANESTHETIC CONCENTRATION. Anesthesiology 1988; 69:A873 doi: https://doi.org/10.1097/00000542-198809010-00873
Download citation file:
Citing articles via
Most Viewed
Related Articles
Lipid Emulsion Reverses Levobupivacaine-induced Responses in Isolated Rat Aortic Vessels
Anesthesiology (February 2011)
Baseline Cerebral Metabolic Rate Is a Critical Determinant of the Cerebral Vasodilating Potency of Volatile Anesthetic Agents
Anesthesiology (July 2018)
Mepivacaine versus Bupivacaine Spinal Anesthesia for Early Postoperative Ambulation: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Anesthesiology (October 2020)
Transient Neurologic Symptoms after Spinal Anesthesia with Mepivacaine and Lidocaine
Anesthesiology (March 1998)