Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.2.1.36 (hyaluronidase)
4,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A prospective, double masked, randomised study was performed to compare the speed of onset of peribulbar anaesthesia using pH adjusted 0.75% bupivacaine, with and without the addition of hyaluronidase. No significant difference in speed of onset occurred due to the addition of hyaluronidase. There were 7 cases of post operative ptosis in the study group, including 1 case of orbital apex syndrome and 2 cases of transient 3rd nerve palsy. This incidence of post operative ptosis using pH adjusted 0.75% bupivacaine was statistically significantly greater than in a matched control group who received a 50:50 mixture of 1% lignocaine and 0.5% bupivacaine with hyaluronidase (p < 0.05). The possible causes of this increased incidence of post operative ptosis are discussed.
...
PMID:The efficacy of 0.75% bupivacaine with pH adjustment and hyaluronidase for peribulbar blockade: the incidence of prolonged ptosis. 801 17

Prilocaine (Citanest) has been shown to be a satisfactory alternative to lignocaine, with certain important advantages, including superior diffusion. The latter may be especially important in peribulbar anesthesia, where the level of diffusion is a critical factor in providing a timely, high-quality block. In a prospective randomized study, we compared the effectiveness of peribulbar vs retrobulbar administration of prilocaine. Eighty-seven patients undergoing elective intraocular surgery were randomized to receive either retrobulbar or peribulbar anesthesia with prilocaine 3% with felypressin and hyaluronidase. Pain of injection, akinesia, and anesthesia were evaluated at predetermined intervals after injection. Except for the fact that lid akinesia occurred earlier in the peribulbar group, there was no difference in the quality or rate of onset of overall akinesia in the two groups. Nor were there any differences in the pain associated with injection. Both groups had excellent operative anesthesia and akinesia.
...
PMID:Peribulbar and retrobulbar anesthesia with prilocaine: a comparison of two methods of local ocular anesthesia. 811 1

Eighty patients with senile cataract were subjected to a planned extracapsular cataract extraction (ECCE) with implantation of a posterior chamber intraocular lens. Retrobulbar anesthesia was administered by injection of 4 mg lidocaine 2% with adrenalin. In 40 patients 150 I.U. hyaluronidase (Kinetin) was added to the anesthesia. The hyaluronidase group had a significantly lower frequency of iris prolapse, and deeper anterior chamber, both before and after expression of the lens nucleus. Possible mechanisms explaining the beneficial effect of hyaluronidase in extracapsular cataract surgery are discussed.
...
PMID:Retrobulbar anesthesia with and without hyaluronidase in extracapsular cataract surgery. A prospective, randomized, double-blind study. 815 55

To determine the most effective local anaesthetic for ingrown toenail surgery, 100 procedures were performed after patients had been randomized to receive lignocaine, bupivacaine or hyaluronidase and bupivacaine. The effect of each anaesthetic was monitored and 80 patients returned a follow-up questionnaire. There was no significant difference in the time for the local anaesthetic to take effect, or in the pain caused by its injection or the procedure. Significant differences were found between treatments with respect to pain at discharge from hospital and significantly fewer patients who received bupivacaine experienced pain 24 h after surgery (P = 0.002). Bupivacaine provides quick-acting and long-lasting anaesthesia and should be used in preference to lignocaine.
...
PMID:Local anaesthetic agents in surgery for ingrown toenail. 817 19

The success rate and duration of lid akinesia after adding hyaluronidase and/or epinephrine to pH-adjusted bupivacaine was examined in a double-blind fashion in patients undergoing cataract surgery under local anaesthesia. A two-injection-site technique was used. For globe akinesia all patients (n = 120) received an inferolateral intraconal injection (3 ml) of pH-adjusted bupivacaine 0.75% and hyaluronidase. Lid akinesia was obtained with a medial extraconal injection (3.5 ml) of alkalinized bupivacaine with or without an adjunct. The patients were randomized to four groups as follows: a medial injection of plain bupivacaine (n = 31), with added hyaluronidase (n = 30), with added epinephrine (n = 29) or with both epinephrine and hyaluronidase (n = 30). The final solutions had a pH of 6.7. Lid akinesia was supplemented with periosteal injections if needed. The degree of akinesia from clinical assessment was graded from 0-2 and also measured with electromyography at ten minute intervals for 30 min after surgery, and three hours after the block. The least satisfactory result (P < 0.01) and shortest duration of the lid block (P < 0.05) was obtained with plain pH-adjusted bupivacaine. No differences in the success rate or duration of the block among the other groups were seen. The duration of the block was longer in the epinephrine groups than in the two other groups (P < 0.01) and longer in the epinephrine and hyaluronidase group than in the group receiving only hyaluronidase (P < 0.05). We conclude that the best initial results and longest duration of blocks were shown in the groups receiving epinephrine or epinephrine and hyaluronidase.
...
PMID:Orbicular muscle akinesia in regional ophthalmic anaesthesia with pH-adjusted bupivacaine: effects of hyaluronidase and epinephrine. 826 62

Two concentrations of etidocaine (1 and 1.5%) and of pH-adjusted bupivacaine (0.5 and 0.75%, pH 6.8), all fortified with hyaluronidase, were compared as local anesthetics in regional ophthalmic surgery for cataract extraction. The series comprised 160 patients assigned randomly to four groups (n = 40). Each patient received one of the four anesthetics in a double blind manner. The technique used was an inferolateral intraconal injection (3 mL) followed by a medial extraconal injection (3 mL). Supplemental injections were given at 10 and 20 min, if needed. At 10 min, globe akinesia was satisfactory in both etidocaine groups and in the 0.75% bupivacaine group (78-80% of patients), but in only 37% of the 0.5% bupivacaine group. In lid akinesia, the 0.75% bupivacaine group gained the highest scores, but there was no significant difference between the groups. Perioperative analgesia was better in both bupivacaine groups, in which only 3 and 5 patients felt pain compared to 7 and 12 in the etidocaine groups (P < 0.05). Of these local anesthetics, pH-adjusted 0.75% bupivacaine is recommended for regional ophthalmic anesthesia.
...
PMID:Comparison of regional ophthalmic anesthesia produced by pH-adjusted 0.75% and 0.5% bupivacaine and 1% and 1.5% etidocaine, all with hyaluronidase. 831 20

A prospective double-blind randomized study was carried out to determine the effect of pH and the addition of hyaluronidase to a mixture of lidocaine and bupivacaine on the efficacy of peribulbar anaesthesia. One hundred patients were assigned to one of five groups. All groups received a solution of two parts bupivacaine (0.75%) and one part lidocaine (2%) (with 1:100,000 adrenaline) as the base components of their anaesthesia. Group 1 received only the bupivacaine-lidocaine mixture, pH 3.9. Group 2 received a solution supplemented with hyaluronidase (ten units.ml-1), pH of 5.1. Group 3 received the bupivacaine-lidocaine mixture alkalinized with sodium bicarbonate to a pH of 5.1, the same as solution 2. Group 4 received the mixture with hyaluronidase alkalinized to pH of 6.7. Group 5 received the bupivacaine-lidocaine mixture alkalinized to a pH of 6.7. Efficacy of each block was graded according to the degree of residual movement 30 min following injection, as described by House et al. The solution containing hyaluronidase and pH adjusted to 6.7 was found to be the most effective (P < 0.025). The presence of hyaluronidase without alkalinization did not improve the efficacy of the mixture; and similarly, alkalinization in the absence of hyaluronidase was ineffective. These results reflected the pH- and temperature-dependent thermodynamic properties of local anaesthetics, and the pH-dependent activity of hyaluronidase.
...
PMID:Improved peribulbar anaesthesia with alkalinization and hyaluronidase. 749 72

Somatosensory, motor, and visual sensory blockade were investigated after retrobulbar injection of 3 mL 2% lidocaine, prilocaine, or mepivacaine plus hyaluronidase (15 U/mL) and naphazoline nitrate (1:20,000) in 90 cataract patients (n = 30 per group). Before injection as well as 20 and 90 minutes after injection, and then every 30 minutes, the quality of the retrobulbar blockade was evaluated in terms of the following factors until full recovery of function: (1) corneal sensitivity at the three extraincisional quadrants as determined with an esthesiometer; (2) horizontal and vertical motility, and elevation of the lid; (3) visual acuity on an arbitrary score scale ranging from 0 (no light perception) to 6 (visual acuity > 0.05); and (4) the time required for recovery from retrobulbar anesthesia. The data were analyzed by one- (anesthetic) and two-factor (anesthetic and time) analysis of variance. Full somatic recovery of corneal sensitivity occurred within 247 +/- 10.2 minutes after lidocaine, within 221 +/- 9.2 minutes after prilocaine, and within 280 +/- 8.5 minutes after mepivacaine (F = 10.1; P < .0001). Full motor recovery (all muscles) occurred within 290 +/- 5.8 minutes after lidocaine, within 258 +/- 5.7 minutes after prilocaine, and within 295 +/- 4.8 minutes after mepivacaine (F = 13.3, P < .0001). On the average, visual acuity decreased most after mepivacaine and least after lidocaine administration, although the differences between the three anesthetics in this regard were not significant. One patient temporarily lost vision after mepivacaine administration. Overall, the somatosensory and motor blockade were most pronounced after mepivacaine.
...
PMID:Retrobulbar blockade of somatic, motor, and visual nerves by local anesthetics. 805 71

Delayed onset of upper lid edema with exuberant chemosis developed in a 3-year-old girl following blunt periorbital trauma. Examination under anesthesia demonstrated a tightly everted upper tarsus that focally compressed the underlying conjunctiva at the superior tarsal border. Injection of subconjunctival hyaluronidase followed by local compression and temporary tarsorrhaphy resulted in rapid resolution of the chemosis and restoration of the normal lid position.
...
PMID:Delayed tarsal eversion following periorbital trauma. 853 95

Orbital regional anesthesia is the only circumstance where hyaluronidase is routinely added to local anesthetics to accelerate the onset of the block. The aim of this study was to compare the pharmacokinetics of lidocaine and bupivacaine with or without hyaluronidase for peribulbar blockade. Twenty-one patients scheduled for cataract surgery with lens implantation were included in this prospective randomized study. Peribulbar blocks were achieved with plain bupivacaine 0.5% (5.5 mL), lidocaine 2% (5.5 mL), and hyaluronidase (100 IU = 2 mL) (n = 10) ir sterile water (2 mL) (n = 11). Plasma bupivacaine and lidocaine concentrations were measured by high-performance liquid chromatography at regular intervals from the end of the local anesthetic injection until the 360th minute. Maximum plasma concentration (Cmax) and time to reach Cmax (Tmax) were obtained for all the patients except one who needed a supplementary injection and was excluded from the study. The time to onset and duration of the analgesia and akinesia were monitored at the times of sampling. Motor blockade was incomplete in two patients in each group without affecting surgery. The Tmax and absorption half-life (t1/2a) of lidocaine and bupivacaine were not different within each group (P > 0.05). The Tmax of lidocaine was shorter in the presence of hyaluronidase (17.1 +/- 2.6 min vs 32.7 +/- 6.0 min) as well as the Tmax of bupivacaine (16.8 +/- 3.0 min vs 26.5 +/- 4.4 min). The Cmax of lidocaine and bupivacaine were not modified by the addition of hyaluronidase. The clearance, terminal half-life, and volume of distribution were not different between groups. The absorption of lidocaine and bupivacaine from the peribulbar space are hastened by the addition of hyaluronidase. The Tmax of lidocaine is not different from that of bupivacaine within each group suggesting that the absorption of local anesthetics is minimally influenced by the liposolubility of the drugs. Moreover, hyaluronidase influences the absorption kinetics of both lidocaine and bupivacaine in the same manner.
...
PMID:The role of hyaluronidase on lidocaine and bupivacaine pharmacokinetics after peribulbar blockade. 861 Aug 68


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>