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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of the analgesics sulfentanil (R 30730) and fentanyl, on autonimic stability, cardiovascular stability, respiratory
depression
and post-operative behaviour were compared in a standardised anaesthetic technique. Twenty-nine patients undergoing neurological arteriographies, were treated with one or more doses of 0.5 mg fentanyl; 22 patients were treated with an initial dose of 0.05 mg of sulfentanil followed by repeat injections of 0.025 mg, when necessary. The analgesic potency of sulfentanil proved to be 12 times that of fentanyl while (in contrast to fentanyl), the duration of the respiratory
depression
after sulfentanil did not differ significantly from the duration of optimal
analgesia
. The effects of both drugs on blood pressure and heart rate were minimal; autonomic stability was excellent. No serious side effects were seen in any of the patients. After sulfentanil
analgesia
the patients were more rapidly awake and lucid, than after fentanyl-
analgesia
. Further investigations with this new and promising drug seem to be of great interest.
...
PMID:Anaesthesia with sulfentanil-analgesia in carotid and vertebral arteriography. A comparison with fentanyl. 0 67
Fentanyl was used in 100 abdominal surgical interventions, combined with droperidol or with diazepan, always with good results as far as
analgesia
was concerned. Tensional variations that occurred during the induction were quite small and disappeared during the filling up. In the course of the intervention, tensional variations were only met with subjects suffering from high blood pressure. The respiratory
depression
that went with
analgesia
did not constitute an obstacle but made it necessary to use artificial ventilation for the intervetion. The awakening was always quick, smooth, without any vomiting and was influenced neither by the time taken up by the intervention nor by the condition of the patient. No residual respiratory
depression
requiring the use of an anti-morphinic was noted. At the end of the study, fentanyl appears as a powerful analgesic, easy to use and successful in all the cases of abdominal surgery. Its effect does not last, a drawback that can be avoided by the use of an intravenous drip.
...
PMID:[Value of moderate fentanyl dosage during anesthesis in abdominal surgery. Apropos of 100 cases]. 0 82
The nociceptive reflex activity and analgesic effect of morphine were studied in rats using the hind paw stimulation test. The stimulation threshold was significantly increased in animals with bilateral destruction of the locus coeruleus (LC), and was reduced after lesion of the dorsal raphe nucleus (DR). LC lesions produced a selective lowering of noradrenaline (NA) content in the forebrain, while DR lesions resulted in a reduction in serotonin levels. Lesioning both LC and DR significantly reduced both NA and serotonin contents even when the stimulation threshold was not altered. Morphine produced a significant and dose-dependent elevation of the stimulation threshold in sham-operated animals, while morphine
analgesia
was almost completely inhibited by destruction of LC, DR and both the nuclei. These results imply that a
depression
of LC-mediated noradrenergic tone results in a decreased sensitivity to painful stimuli, whereas a reduction of raphe-derived serotonergic tone produces the opposite effect against LC. It is suggested, however, that both of these monoamines from the LC and DR are necessary for the analgesic effect of morphine.
...
PMID:Attenuation of morphine analgesia in rats with lesions of the locus coeruleus and dorsal raphe nucleus. 1 37
Neuroleptic
analgesia
, which is used for the major part of the conduct of labour, has the advantage of abolishing the pain of uterine contractions without altering the mother's state of consciousness. A study of the effects of droperidol together with phenoperidine on the mother and the child has been carried out. Clinical results, the parameters of the intra-uterine pressure curves and the fetal heart rates as well as of the acid base balance and the pO2 of the mother and infant during dilatation of the cervix and the two first hours of life have been monitored. The conclusion is that neuroleptic
analgesia
does not cause neonatal
depression
and can be used as a method for conducting labour so long as very strict monitoring conditions are applied.
...
PMID:[Neuroleptic analgesia in the management of labor]. 2 Dec 3
The object of this study was the use of naloxone to correct hypoventilation related to the use of morphinomimetics without suppressing the analgesic effect of these agents. The study involved ten patients undergoing gynaecological surgery under neuroleptanalgesia and who at the end of surgery had hypoventilation due to the use of fentanyl (average dose : 4.87 microgram/kg/h) or phenoperidine (average dose : 48.7 microgram/kg/h). Naloxone was administered intravenously in an average dose of 1.37 microgram/kg (in one or two injections) followed by an intramuscular injection of an average of 0.73 microgram/kg. Under these conditions, respiratory
depression
was completely corrected in all cases, the effect being durable. Good
analgesia
was retained and there was a normal return to consciousness without undesirable effects.
...
PMID:[Antagonistic effects of naloxone against morphinomimetic agents. Apropos of 10 cases in gynecologic surgery]. 2 37
Morphine, the principal alkaloid of "papaver somniferum" is the reference substance of central analgesics, the parmacodynamic constants of which are:
analgesia
and the possibility of addiction. Respiratory
depression
is, for many of them, a grave side-effect. At the present time, no substance in this category is fully satisfactory and all may result in dependence. Equi-analgesic doses of dextromoramide, phenoperidine and Fentanyl are less than those of morphine, whilst those of pethidine and pentazocine are higher. Study of the pharmacokinetics of these various substances indicates no common elements, and it is difficult to consider that the analgesic action is proportional to blood levels. Clinical assessment of the mean duration of action makes it possible to divide morphine derivatives into substances with a very short action (20 to 45 minutes) such as Febtanyl and phenoperidine, and those with a longer action (1 to 4 hours) which includes the majority of the other substances. The analgesic activity of Methoadone lasts for 4 to 6 hours. Morphine antagonists such as Methadone, nalophine, naloxone and naltrexone possess specific problems in terms of their utilization. Pharmacological data concerning theses substances are described.
...
PMID:[Pharmacology of morphine and its derivatives (review)]. 2 28
Receptor mechanisms for narcotic-induced respiratory
depression
and
analgesia
were compared by apparent pA2 values of morphine-naloxone, levorphanol-naloxone and pentazocine-naloxone. The similarity of apparent pA2 values of the three compunds for respiratory
depression
suggests that morphine, levorphanol and pentazocine may interact with similar receptors to produce this effect. Significant differences between apparent pA2 values of pentazocine-naloxone and morphine-naloxone or levor-phanol-naloxone for
analgesia
suggest, as previously shown, that narcotic and narcotic-antagonist analgesics appear to interact with receptors in different manners. Significant differences between apparent pA2 values for respiratory
depression
and
analgesia
suggest that these two effects of the narcotic drugs are mediated by different receptor interactions.
...
PMID:Antagonism by naloxone of narcotic-induced respiratory depression and analgesia. 3 Aug 41
The influences of the dopaminergic system on morphine-induced
analgesia
and respiratory
depression
were compared using modulators of dopaminergic activity. Blockade of dopaminergic receptors by haloperidol or pimozide produced a potentiation of morphine
analgesia
, while stimulation of dopaminergic activity by L-dopa methyl ester inhibited morphine
analgesia
. Morphine-induced
depression
of respiratory rate was potentiated by haloperidol and inhibited by pimozide or L-dopa methyl ester. These results suggest that the dopaminergic system plays a modulating role in morphine-induced
analgesia
, but not in morphine-induced respiratory
depression
.
...
PMID:The effect of dopaminergic modifiers on morphine-induced analgesia and respiratory depression. 3 17
Management of the chronic pain of cancer is a common and difficult problem. In addition to a medical examination of the patient, it is necessary to perform a psychological assessment of his premorbid personality, current mental status, and coping mechanisms to devise an individualized approach to his pain. The mainstay of cancer pain control are the narcotics, which differ primarily in potency and duration of action. Nonnarcotic analgesics are equianalgesic with the less potent narcotics. Antipsychotic drugs are useful as tranquilizers, antiemetics, and analgesic potentiators. Antidepressants and hypnotics permit the patient a more normal life-style. Stimulants such as cocaine and amphetamines both potentiate narcotic
analgesia
and reduce narcotic-induced somnolence and respiratory
depression
. Tetrahydrocannabinol offers no advantage over traditional analgesics. With care and patience, the physician can render practically any cancer patient pain-free.
...
PMID:Medical management of chronic cancer pain. 3 26
Actions of morphine include
analgesia
, sleep, euphoria, and
depression
of respiration. Transmitter or modulator substances in the brain that have actions similar to morphine may control these functions in man. This hypothesis proposes that enkephalin is a controlling neurotransmitter and its binding to opiate receptors determines mood state as well as influencing respiratory and sleep patterns. Lithium may act through modification of the opiate receptor affinity for an endogenous morphine-like substance. The theory predicts blocking action of naloxone in mania and in most drug-induced euphorias. It implies a new chemical pathophysiological basis for the phenomenology of mental illness.
...
PMID:Peptide transmitters: a unifying hypothesis for euphoria, respiration, sleep, and the action of lithium. 5 53
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