Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0010200 (cough)
23,843 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A retrospective analysis of 50 patients who had been observed to aspirate gastric contents was performed to define better the course of patients with this syndrome. The patients invariably had a disturbance of consciousness, most commonly due to sedative drug overdose or general anesthesia. The onset of clinical signs occurred prompty after aspiration and tended to be similar in all patients, irrespective of their subsequent course or outcome. These findings usually included fever, tachypnea, diffuse rales, and serious hypoxemia. Cough, cyanosis, wheezing, and apnea were each seen in approximately one third of the cases. Apena, shock, and early severe hypoxemia were particularly ominous events. Initial roentgenograms revealed diffuse or localized alveolar infiltrates, which progressed during the next 24 to 36 hours. Subsequent clinical courses followed 3 patterns: 12 per cent of the patients died shortly after aspiration; 62 per cent had rapid clinical and radiologic improvement, with clearing, on average, within 4.5 days; 26 per cent demonstrated rapid improvement, but then had clinical and radiographic progression associated with recovery of bacterial pathogens from the sputum and a fatal outcome in more than 60 per cent. Treatment from the outset by adrenocortical steroids or antimicrobial agents had no demonstrable effect on the outcome. The clinical features of aspiration of gastric contents are characteristic and distinguish it from other forms of aspiration-related lung disease.
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PMID:Pulmonary aspiration of gastric contents. 100 48

Hypnosis is able to induce a state of total psychological calm in very many subjects, including maintenance or even enhancement of their ability to cooperate. A smaller number of more receptive subjects may even achieve ocular anaesthesia, though this is not suitable for the performance of operations because the Dagnini-Aschner reflex persists and hypotonia is not attained. It is considered, therefore, that the association of hypnosis, retrobulbar pharmacological anaesthesia, and akinesia offers the best conditions for the performance of operations involving major opening of the eyeball, such as those associated with cataract, i.e. psychological tranquility with the ability to cooperate, anaesthesia with neurovegetative areflexia, hypotonia, and a postoperative course undisturbed by coughing and vomiting. The results of several years' experience have shown the complete suitability of the method and its wide possibilities of application.
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PMID:[Hypnosis in ophthalmology]. 118 37

Use of general anesthesia permits the injection of Teflon paste into immobile vocal cords in an accurate and predictable manner, with the help of a special endotracheal tube and jetted O2 or O2/n2O mixture. The authors position a nonfunctioning vocal cord so that when the functioning cord is fully adducted , the two cords are in perfect approximation for phonation. This has allowed marked improvement in effective expulsive postoperative coughing and vocalization. Debris is blown away from the operating side and not into the patient's trachea. If excessive injection of Teflon is avoided, an uneventful postoperative course can be expected.
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PMID:Teflon injection of vocal cords under general anesthesia: a new method. 123 10

The endotracheal administration of anesthesia has been improved considerably in the past decade. By reducing mortality and morbidity, this modality has made possible many advances in all forms of surgery, especially of the chest, head, and neck. There are, however, some disadvantages: 1. The endotracheal tube is a foreign body and thus can cause irritation. 2. Lubricants and solutions used for cleansing and sterilizing the tube may be irritating and can produce a membrane which obstructs the airway. 3. The lumen of the airway is reduced, an especially hazardous problem in children. 4. The patient must be under deeper anesthesia for intubation than is sometimes necessary for the surgical procedure. 5. There may be trauma to teeth, pharynx, nose, or trachea during intubation. 6. Coughing or straining may cause increased venous pressure, with undesired effects. 7. Bacteria from the nose may be carried to the lower respiratory tract. 8. Pulmonary sequelae may occur. 9. Laryngeal sequelae may occur. It is with laryngeal sequelae that we are concerned in this (1951) presentation, which includes the reports of 8 cases of laryngeal obstruction, with 2 deaths, and 7 cases of laryngeal granulomas.
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PMID:Laryngeal sequelae of endotracheal anesthesia. 123 15

Severe postoperative pain, which may persist for up to 3 days and may lead to postoperative complications, due to the patient's inability to breathe deeply and cough, is frequently experienced in the area of the incision and chest tubes by thoracotomy patients. Eighteen patients undergoing routine thoracotomies were tested preoperatively for arterial blood gases and pulmonary function and given chest x-rays. Anesthesia consisted of thiopental, succinylcholine, N2O, enflurane, and pancuronium. Before incision closure, 6 intercostal spaces were injected by the surgeon with 3 ml of a randomly determined drug mixture. Patients received either bupivacaine and saline solution, bupivacaine and LMW dextran 40, or saline and LMW dextran 40. Arterial blood gases, pulmonary function, chest x-rays, narcotic dosage, sensory level, and subjective responses were evaluated for 3 days postoperatively. Results demonstrate that intercostal nerve blocks can markedly reduce postoperative pain and improve pulmonary function in such patients. Significant differences from controls were seen in Pao2, Paco2, vital capacity, forced expiratory flow rates, analgesic requirements, and patient comfort. The duration of the block with bupivacaine and saline was less than 12 hours, while the mean duration of the block with bupivacaine and dextran 40 was 36 hours.
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PMID:Postoperative analgesia for thoracotomy patients. 123 16

The induction characteristics of etomidate, a new i.v. hypnotic agent, were studied in 400 patients. Two hundred were premedicated with atropine and anaesthesia was induced with 0.2, 0.25, 0.3 or 0.35 mg/kg of etomidate. The remainder received one of four standard premedications and anaesthesia was induced with etomidate 0.3 mg/kg. Involuntary muscle movements occurred in more than 60% of patients receiving atropine alone. The frequency was reduced in the second group, but remained unacceptable in over 8% of patients. The incidence of other excitatory phenomena, such as cough and hiccup, was 10% approximately. Cardiovascular changes were minimal and no serious allergic phenomena were observed. Nausea and vomiting occurred after surgery in up to 30% of patients and was unrelated to the dose of etomidate or to premedication. Pain on injection occurred in up to 80% of patients when the drug was injected into small peripheral veins and occurred in more than 7% when using more normal veins.
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PMID:Effect of dose and premedication on induction complications with etomidate. 125 85

1. The effect of breathing an anaesthetic aerosol of 5% bupivacaine hydrochloride has been assessed in dog and man. 2. In the dog, the cough reflex was abolished and the Hering-Breuer inflation reflex severely impaired or abolished; breathing became slower and deeper; no pathological changes were found in the lungs of these dogs. 3. In man, no untoward effects resulted from a 10 min period of aerosol inhalation; there were no systematic effects on airway resistance or lung volumes and the cough reflex in response to either tactile or chemical (citric acid aerosol) stimulation was invariably abolished. The Hering-Breuer inflation reflex was impaired, but this was not associated with any change in resting ventilation. The Ve/CO2 response was enhanced after aerosol anaesthesia; subjects felt an exaggerated dyspnoea. The aerosol anaesthesia abolished the afferent pathway of a reflexly elicited bronchoconstriction in one subject. There was no effect on the ability to hold the breath, or on the quality of the associated sensation. 4. Control aerosols of sodium chloride solution or phosphate buffer produced no effects. Control experiments with intravenous infusions of bupivacaine proved that none of the effects could have been produced by systemic effects of the absorbed anaesthetic. 5. Plasma concentrations of bupivacaine in man did not exceed a recognized toxic level. The experiments demonstrate a safe reversible anaesthesia of the airways in man lasting for a period of 10-20 min.
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PMID:The effect of anaesthesia of the airway in dog and man: a study of respiratory reflexes, sensations and lung mechanics. 127 53

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of lidocaine administered via the endotracheal tube in suppressing cough reflex during anesthetic recovery in children. Fifty ASA class I-II children, aged from 1-5 years old undergoing elective abdominal or urogenital surgery were randomly assigned into two groups. 2% lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg (1ml = 20mg) was administered in group B while normal saline (N/S) 0.1 ml/kg was used in group A (control group). Either one of the agents was instilled into the endotracheal tube right before the end of operation. Airway responses and other associated phenomena were recorded during the recovery period. Recovery condition was categorized into a two-grade categories, namely "good", and "poor" to denote the quality of recovery. Recovery conditions differ significantly between the control group and the experimental group. In group A, 3 patients were classified as the "good" grade but 22 patients were categorized in the "poor" grade. Group B (lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg) has a much better recovery condition than the control group, there were 19 in the "good" grade and only 6 in the "poor" grade. The experimental group treated with 2% lidocaine presented a significantly better recovery than the control group. This effective suppression of the cough reflex might be due to the local anesthetic effect exerted by lidocaine. For the sake of safety all patients were closely followed up at the post anesthesia room until the return of consciousness and laryngeal reflexes. In conclusion, we found that 2% lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg given intratracheally via the endotracheal tube could attenuate cough response during recovery in pediatric anesthesia.
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PMID:Endotracheal lidocaine instillation in pediatric anesthesia. 134 38

We studied recovery in 25 adult patients, ASA I, undergoing elective orthopaedic procedures after anaesthesia with 0.65 MAC desflurane (n = 16) or isoflurane (n = 9) with 60% nitrous oxide in oxygen. Early emergence from anaesthesia was assessed in the operating room by measuring time to spontaneous movement, cough, response to painful pinch, tracheal extubation, opening of the eyes and stating correct age, name and body parts. The return of cognitive functions in the late recovery phase was assessed in the post-anaesthesia care unit (PACU) by post-anaesthesia recovery scores (PARS), the Trieger dot test (TDT), and the digit substitution test (DST). In the early recovery phase, time to tracheal extubation, opening eyes, telling correct name, age and body parts occurred significantly faster in the desflurane group than in the isoflurane group (P < 0.05). The mean "triple orientation" time (to name, age, body parts) was 10.9 (SEM 0.9) min for desflurane, compared with 18.6 (2.5) min for isoflurane (P < 0.01). In the late recovery phase, desflurane patients had significantly greater PARS, more correct responses to the DST and fewer error responses to the TDT. Recovery times were not increased by increased duration of desflurane anaesthesia. The desflurane patients showed no delirium, minimal sedation and less shivering during the entire postoperative course. We conclude that desflurane anaesthesia was superior to isoflurane anaesthesia, not only in emergence, but also in the recovery of cognitive functions.
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PMID:Recovery of cognitive functions after anaesthesia with desflurane or isoflurane and nitrous oxide. 138 42

A double-blind, randomized study compared the cardiovascular responses and extubation conditions using lignocaine or cocaine for topical anaesthesia of the larynx. Absorption of both agents from the trachea was quantified by serial venous plasma concentrations. Serial blood pressure, ECG, O2 saturation and end-tidal carbon dioxide measurements were obtained. Conditions at extubation were assessed on duration of coughing, graded on a scale of 1-4 (1 = no coughing, 2 = single cough, 3 = coughing lasting less than 30 s, 4 = coughing lasting 30 s or more). No difference was found in cardiovascular measurements between the two groups. The patterns of absorption of cocaine and lignocaine from the laryngeal mucosa were very similar, with peak absorption occurring at 10-15 min after laryngeal spraying. Although cocaine reduced the incidence of post-operative coughing when compared with lignocaine, this did not reach statistical significance.
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PMID:Topical anaesthesia of the larynx: cocaine or lignocaine? 139 26


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