Giorgio Ivani
Boston Children's Hospital
82 Papers
899 Citations
Giorgio Ivani is an academic researcher from Boston Children's Hospital. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ropivacaine & Bupivacaine. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 81 publications. Previous affiliations of Giorgio Ivani include University of Genoa.
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Papers
The American Society of Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine and the European Society Of Regional Anaesthesia and Pain Therapy Joint Committee recommendations for education and training in ultrasound-guided regional anesthesia.
Brian D. Sites,Vincent W. S. Chan,Joseph M. Neal,Robert S. Weller,Thomas Grau,Zbigniew J. Koscielniak-Nielsen,Giorgio Ivani +6 more
TL;DR: 10 common tasks used when performing an ultrasound-guided nerve block, the core competencies and skill sets associated with UGRA, a training practice pathway for postgraduate anesthesiologists, and a residency-based training pathway are defined.
351
The European society of regional anaesthesia and pain therapy/American society of regional anesthesia and pain medicine recommendations on local anesthetics and adjuvants dosage in pediatric regional anesthesia
Santhanam Suresh,Claude Ecoffey,Adrian T. Bosenberg,Per Anne Lonnqvist,Gildasio S. De Oliveira,Oscar de Leon Casasola,Jose De Andres,Giorgio Ivani +7 more
TL;DR: High-level evidence is not yet available to guide dosage of LA used in regional blocks in children, and the ASRA/ESRA recommendations intend to provide guidance in order to reduce the large variability of LA dosage currently observed in clinical practice.
231
How to prolong postoperative analgesia after caudal anaesthesia with ropivacaine in children: S-ketamine versus clonidine.
TL;DR: The aim of the study was to determine whether caudal S‐ketamine or clonidine prolonged analgesia together with ropivacaine contributed to pain relief in patients with chronic pain.
117
Comparison of Racemic Bupivacaine, Ropivacaine, and Levo-Bupivacaine for Pediatric Caudal Anesthesia: Effects on Postoperative Analgesia and Motor Block
Giorgio Ivani,Pasquale DeNegri,Alessandra Conio,Roberto Grossetti,Pasquale Vitale,Claudia Vercellino,Ferdinando Gagliardi,Staffan Eksborg,Per-Arne Lönnqvist +8 more
TL;DR: All 3 investigated local anesthetics were found to be clinically comparable despite the slight reduction of early postoperative motor block associated with the use of ropivacaine.
114
Ropivacaine‐clonidine combination for caudal blockade in children
TL;DR: Adding clonidine to weak ropivacaine solutions (<0.2%) could potentially enhance analgesia as well as further reduce the risk for unwanted motor blockade in children following caudal administration in children.
107