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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The safety and efficacy of patient-controlled analgesia used for postoperative pain relief were evaluated. Cumulative 24-hour requirements were analyzed for possible correlation with patient characteristics. All patients who used a patient-controlled analgesia device for postoperative pain relief were reviewed from June to October 1991. The device Baxter's basal/bolus infusor with patient control module, was used to deliver fentanyl in 379 patients. The fentanyl requirement, verbal analog pain score, first passage of flatus, side effects, sedative score, and degree of satisfaction were examined. The fentanyl requirement during the first 24 hours after operation was analyzed with regard to age, body weight, and sex. The daily fentanyl consumption in the first three postoperative days was 928 +/- 352 micrograms (n = 338), 553 +/- 259 micrograms (n = 220), and 490 +/- 222 micrograms (n = 71), respectively. The requirement for fentanyl during the first 24 hours after surgery was significantly higher than for the next two days (p-value < 0.001). Fentanyl consumption correlated well with body weight, and inversely with age. No difference was found between fentanyl consumption and sex (p-value = 0.4687). The mean time to the first passage of flatus in patients with abdominal surgery was 54.6 +/- 26.4 hours. The incidence of nausea, vomiting, and
dizziness
was similar, about 20% of patients. Itching was noted in 7% of patients. Oversedation (class 4) was found in three patients during the first operative day, the sedative score for other patients were around class 1-3. No patient exhibited signs of respiratory
depression
or withdrawal syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[The efficacy of intravenous fentanyl patient-controlled analgesia for postoperative pain relief]. 134 40
A review of the safety and tolerability of fluvoxamine in worldwide marketing studies involving 24,624 patients, predominantly receiving fluvoxamine treatment in uncontrolled studies in
depression
, has been conducted. There was a marked preponderance of female patients and patients aged between 30 and 50 years. The majority of patients were treated for 6 weeks, with the most frequent modal total daily dose being 100mg. The greatest proportion of adverse experiences occurring, by COSTART body system, affected the digestive system (24.1%), the nervous system (23.7%), and the body as a whole (15.3%). The only adverse experience with an incidence greater than 10% was nausea (15.7%), with somnolence (6.9%) and asthenia (6.2%) as the next most frequent experiences. Notably, the rates of agitation and anxiety were only 1.4 and 1.3%, respectively. The incidences of adverse experiences increased with age, and were slightly higher in females than males. 15.1% of patients discontinued treatment prematurely as a result of adverse experiences, principally nausea,
dizziness
, vomiting, somnolence, abdominal pain, and headache. The overall incidence of serious adverse events associated with fluvoxamine treatment was 2.5%, and the incidence of overall suicidality, including suicidal ideation, overdose, and intentional overdose as well as attempted and completed acts of suicide, was remarkably low at 0.8%.
...
PMID:Review of fluvoxamine safety database. 137 74
We reviewed the clinical histories, examinations and results of quantitative vestibular testing in 91 patients with migraine-associated
dizziness
. Nausea and vomiting, hypersensitivity to motion and postural instability accompanied the
dizziness
. In the majority of patients, the temporal profile of the
dizziness
was more typical of the headache phase of migraine than of the aura phase. Nineteen patients (20.9%) had unilateral hypoexcitability to caloric stimulation, which represents a modestly increased risk of damage to the peripheral vestibular apparatus. We propose two separate pathophysiologic mechanisms for the production of
dizziness
with migraine: Short-duration vertiginous attacks lasting minutes to 2 hours and temporally associated with headache are due to the same mechanism as other aura phenomena (spreading wave of
depression
and/or transient vasospasm). Longer-duration attacks of vertigo and motion sickness lasting days, with or without headache, result from the release of neuroactive peptides into peripheral and central vestibular structures, causing an increased baseline firing of primary afferent neurons and increased sensitivity to motion.
...
PMID:Migraine-associated dizziness. 848 17
The arrival of clozapine has been one of the most significant developments in antipsychotic drug treatment since the advent of chlorpromazine ushered in the psychopharmacologic era. However, its utilization has been significantly limited and complicated by its potential to cause adverse effects and agranulocytosis in particular. It must be emphasized that clozapine has a side effect profile that is in many ways distinct from standard typical antipsychotic drugs. Side effects with clozapine are common and range from the benign to the potentially lethal. The most common side effects include sedation,
dizziness
, and sialorrhea during sleep; the most serious are agranulocytosis, seizures and respiratory
depression
. Although side effects from clozapine are not necessarily preventable, they are for the most part manageable. Even with the most serious adverse effects, proper knowledge of the medication's actions, clinical vigilance, and prompt intervention can prevent the occurrence of significant morbidity and mortality as a consequence of clozapine treatment.
...
PMID:Clinical profile of clozapine: adverse reactions and agranulocytosis. 143 5
At the beginning, the way intrathecal morphine was used for postoperative pain relief was quite unfortunate, because the doses derived from experience with morphine-tolerant cancer patients were considerably too high and respiratory
depression
occurred frequently. Subsequent dose-finding studies showed that the doses of morphine used initially could be reduced by a factor of ten without loss of the analgesic effect and with a marked reduction in side-effects. No respiratory
depression
has been reported when doses below 0.1 mg morphine are used. METHOD. In this prospective study the effect of 0.06 to 0.08 mg intrathecal morphine, mixed with the local anaesthetic for spinal anesthesia, was investigated in surgical patients aged 21 to 81 years, ASA grade I or II, scheduled for orthopaedic operations or herniorraphies. Thirty unpremedicated patients were enrolled in the study and were, after informed consent, randomly allocated to a control group without morphine or to a morphine group. The analgesic effect was assessed by the time interval between the administration of the spinal anaesthesia and the first demand for an analgesic medication. The mood state was evaluated with the adjective checklist of Janke and Debus 6 h after the spinal anaesthesia. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION. In the control group half of the patients asked for an analgesic medication within 275 min (median) after the spinal anaesthesia, and all patients within 420 min, whereas in the morphine group half of the patients asked for an analgesic within 1170 min (median). Seven patients had not required an analgesic at the termination of the observation period 20 h after the spinal anaesthesia. The mood status showed no difference between the two groups, in particular, no
dizziness
or drowsiness after morphine. There was no difference in the incidence of side-effects such as nausea or urinary retention between the two groups. Pruritus was not reported spontaneously but was found upon questioning in five patients. It was in no case disturbing. CONCLUSIONS. Morphine (0.06 to 0.08 mg) mixed with the local anaesthetic for spinal anaesthesia provided for an analgesia of more than 20 h duration in half of the patients. This technique is safe, simple, reliable and virtually free of side-effects. No particular supervision due to the administration of intrathecal morphine is necessary in this dose range if systemic opiates are avoided. If the analgesia is unsatisfactory, a non-opioid analgesic is recommended.
...
PMID:[Intrathecal morphine for postoperative pain]. 146 57
The aim of this study was to verify long-term therapeutic efficacy and tolerance of dihydroergocristine (DHEC, CAS 17479-19-5) in a double blind placebo controlled study, in elderly patients with psychosyndrome characterized by memory and behaviour impairment. Two hundred patients, aged more than 65 years, were randomly divided into two groups of one hundred each. The first group received one 6-mg DHEC tablet daily for four months and the other group received placebo. The evaluation parameter for efficacy was the neuropsychological test SCAG (Scale of Clinical Assessment for Geriatrics), administered before and after 30, 60 and 120 days. The results showed a significant difference between DHEC and placebo with regard to total and partial scores of SCAG as well as to single items (mental alertness, recent memory, disorientation, anxiety, mood
depression
, emotional lability, motivation, uncooperativeness, fatigue, headache, tinnitus). After as few as thirty days of DHEC treatment the severity of mental and psychological symptoms was markedly decreased (p vs placebo < 0.01), as documented by significant positive changes of SCAG items. The four-month double blind period was followed by a two-month single blind period, during which patients of both groups received placebo. At the end of these two months, SCAG total score was unfavourably increased in patients previously administered DHEC, although scores were still significantly lower both versus baseline and versus previous placebo patients. Safety was good (placebo: one case of diarrhea; DHEC: one case of gastralgia and
dizziness
). Nine patients dropped out for reasons unrelated to treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Controlled study of the effect of dihydroergocristine on organic brain psychosyndrome]. 149 63
1. Three oral glucose tolerance tests were performed in each of 32 symptomatic postprandial hypoglycaemic patients (before placebo, before doxepin therapy and after doxepin therapy). Plasma neurotransmitters were determined in parallel with assays of plasma insulin and glucose levels. 2. Three different types of patients were distinguished. Type I showed a low noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio, high dopamine levels and low platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) levels during basal periods. After a glucose load, late peaks of dopamine and free 5-hydroxytryptamine, which coincided with the symptoms but not with the nadir of plasma glucose, were observed. Type II showed a low basal plasma noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio. After a glucose load, progressive increases in adrenaline and decreases in glucose were seen. Adrenergic symptoms coincided with the nadir of glucose. Although type III patients showed hyperinsulinaemia after a glucose load similar to the other types of patient, they did not show hyperglycaemia, but rather exhibited a sustained and progressive reduction in plasma glucose. These patients were characterized by a high basal plasma noradrenaline/adrenaline ratio, high basal plasma levels of 4-hydroxy-3-methoxyphenylethyleneglycol and high basal levels of platelet 5-hydroxytryptamine, all of which increased after a glucose load. Systolic and diastolic blood pressure decreases paralleled reductions in heart rate and glucose. The nadir of plasma glucose occurred simultaneously with the appearance of symptoms (weakness, heartburn, oppressive chest pain, tension headache, abdominal cramps,
dizziness
, etc.). Therapy with doxepin led to disappearance of the symptoms within 3-4 weeks. Normalization of all other disordered variables (cardiovascular, metabolic and neurochemical, and the clonidine test) paralleled the disappearance of the symptoms. 3. Symptoms varied in the three types of patients and we conclude that they are related to hypoglycaemia-induced disorders of plasma neurotransmitters, rather than to hypoglycaemia per se. We postulate that an uncoping stress situation (type I and II patients) and
depression
(type III patients) underlie the physiopathological mechanisms.
...
PMID:Doxepin therapy for postprandial symptomatic hypoglycaemic patients: neurochemical, hormonal and metabolic disturbances. 167 82
Somatic symptoms are one of the leading reasons for medical outpatient clinic visits, with the most common symptoms having a prevalence of 10% or more. However, the usual diagnostic workups are often unproductive, with less than 1 in 5 symptoms having an organic explanation after the initial physical examination and laboratory testing. Therapy appears more effective for some symptoms than for others. Of patients with unspecified pain or gastrointestinal complaints, greater than 70% state that some type of treatment has been helpful, whereas less than 50% of individuals with fatigue,
dizziness
, numbness, insomnia, sexual dysfunction, anxiety, or
depression
report any relief. Future educational efforts and research need to focus on that majority of symptoms that are either psychiatric or unexplained, in order to improve our current evaluation and management strategies.
...
PMID:Symptoms in medical patients: an untended field. 173 31
The present paper is part on an extensive follow-up study aimed at the investigation of the effects of in-patient psychotherapy and at the durability of those effects. Using a psychoanalytic oriented personality-inventory (PSKB, Rudolf 1981) 85 phobic patients were examined at the beginning, at the end, and one year after a 6-8 week in-patient psychotherapy. Our results confirmed some of the generally described personality-characteristics in patients with phobia: the phobic symptoms are often accompanied by physical symptoms (sensation of
dizziness
, weakness sensation, palpitation, sleep disturbance, heavy sweating and breathlessness) and psychic symptoms (anxiousness,
depression
, restlessness, reduced self-awareness, pedantry, inhibition of aggressive impulses) which could be influenced by psychotherapy. Furthermore we depicted results which have not yet been published in literature.
...
PMID:[Personality markers of phobic patients and their change in psychotherapy. Descriptive results of a catamnestic project of the effectiveness of 6-9 week inpatient treatment]. 177 Dec 26
The large number of antidepressants available provides a wide range of choice. While clinical effectiveness is the most important consideration, toxicity in overdose must be considered in the risk-benefit assessment of each antidepressant. There are almost 300 deaths each year in Britain from tricyclic overdose, and very few deaths from newer antidepressants. Fluvoxamine appears to have low toxicity in overdose. Symptoms are often minimal: nausea, vomiting,
dizziness
and somnolence. There is one reported case of prolonged cerebral
depression
after ingestion of 5.5 g. Overdoses of up to 9 g have produced minimal symptoms and full recovery. No deaths from overdose with fluvoxamine alone have been reported in the literature, although one death certificate in Britain has mentioned fluvoxamine as the cause of death. Fluvoxamine appears to be a valuable alternative to the tricyclic antidepressants, and has a high margin of safety in overdose.
...
PMID:Overdose and safety with fluvoxamine. 180 34
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