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General anesthesia offers greater comfort for both the abortion patient and the operator. The combination of diazepam and ketamine which is rapidly reversible and offers a moderately deep anesthesia was used in 127 voluntary abortions and 3 therapeutic abortions. Patients ranged in age from 14-40 years and averaged 26, with 58% under 26. Patient weights ranged from 40-82 kg and averaged 56 kg. 43% were primaparas and average parity was 2.5. The average duration of the prenancy was 8.1 weeks. 10 patients were obese, 1 was asthmatic, 1 was a controlled hypertensive, 3 had cardiopathies, and 4 each had hepatitis and meningitis. 1 had treated epilepsy and 2 had serious depressive syndromes. 3 women had previously had voluntary abortions, 9 had had miscarriages, and 1 had had an extrauterine pregnancy. 17% had no fear or anxiety before the procedure, 56% had moderate levels, 28% had significant levels, and 19% had very high levels. 94% of the procedures were done by aspiration and in most cases a preliminary insertion of laminaria was done. The average duration of the procedure was 5 minutes, with extremes of 2 and 25 minutes. Patients were premedicated 1 hour before the procedure with intramuscular injections of 10 mg diazepam and 1/4 mg of atropine. For the induction, a butterfly needle with an antireturn system was used to inject 10 mg of diazepam and 1/4 mg of atropine diluted in 20 ml of distilled water. The patient was placed in the gynecological position and, if necessary, 5 mg of diazepam were added. Between .5-1 mg/kg of ketamine were injected in 10-15 seconds. The same dose was reinjected if the anesthesia was insufficient or the procedure was prolonged. A mixture of 40% oxygen and 60% nitrous oxide was administered if necessary. Patients remained in bed for 6 hours after awakening. 85% of patients received total doses of ketamine of .70mg/kg or less. Average duration of anesthesia was 9.2 minutes, with durations of less than 15 minutes in 94% of cases. On awakening 5% of patients had nausea and vomiting. 16% had minor psychic disturbances or disorientation, 8% had moderate problems with vocalization, and 2% had hallucinatory delirium with agitation. Overall, 20% of patients experienced headaches, 11% nausea, and 9% dizziness. It was concluded that the combination of diazepam .2 mg/kg and ketamine .5-.7 mg/kg provides well tolerated light anesthesia utilizable for outpatient abortions.
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PMID:[Diazepam and ketamine for voluntary interruptions of pregnancy]. 692 72

"T's and B's" is the street name for the combination of pentazocine and tripelennamine. This combination of drugs has emerged as a major intravenous substitute for heroin in recent years, especially in the Midwest. 104 cases involving 82 patients over a 9-month period were seen at St. Elizabeth Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio. Abscesses and cellulitis were seen in 39% of cases. A characteristic drug reaction involved 38% of cases, and consisted of chest pain, agitation, anxiety, muscle spasms, dizziness, diaphoresis, and nausea as well as other symptoms. Seizures, syncope, and near-syncope were seen in 15% of cases, and a previously described pulmonary reaction involved 38% of cases, and consisted of chest pain syndrome was seen in 4% of the cases.
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PMID:"T's and B's"-Midwestern heroin substitute. 731 93

Seven hundred twelve patients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for major depression and recommended for antidepressant treatment were treated with moclobemide as outpatients (88%) or inpatients in ordinary psychiatric practices. These differ from the highly selected patients usually studied in antidepressant research, without comorbidity, or coprescription and treated in special clinics. Sixty-five percent were women, with a mean age of 45 (+/- 13.6) years, and 88% were outpatients. Eighty-eight percent had preexisting depression. Eight percent had prior manic episodes. Previous antidepressant treatment for this episode had been received by 69%, with the most common reasons for change to moclobemide being inadequate response (66%) and poor tolerability (20%). The modal final dose was 450 mg. Regarding tolerability, 52% did not report adverse events. The most common adverse events were insomnia or stimulation (13%), nausea (11%), headache or migraine (11%), dizziness or disorientation (6%), sedation or drowsiness (5%), agitation or nervousness (3%), and diarrhea (3%). Only 10% of adverse events were severe, and 83% lasted less than 2 weeks. There was no difference when moclobemide followed fluoxetine use. Most adverse events did not significantly differ from the frequencies reported in double-blind placebo-controlled studies. Concomitant medications from all major drug groups were taken by 520 patients (73%), with no adverse interactions. Moclobemide overdose resulted in an uneventful recovery, whereas mixed overdoses caused no problems other than those attributable to coprescribed medication. On physician clinical global impression, 65% were moderately improved or better after 8 weeks.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Moclobemide for depression: an Australian psychiatric practice study. 759 27

Drug development in psychiatry has evolved from a process dependent on chance discovery to one based on rationally targeting specific mechanisms of action believed to be important in the pathophysiology underlying psychiatric syndromes. Antidepressant pharmacotherapy is the first area to have substantially benefited from this evolution. Serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) were the first class of psychiatric medications developed based on such molecular targeting. Nefazodone is a new antidepressant that combines blockade of the serotonin-2 receptor with serotonin uptake inhibition. Perhaps as a result of this dual action, nefazodone caused fewer complaints of nervousness (e.g., agitation, anxiety), insomnia, and tremors and a higher incidence of confusion, dizziness, and vision disturbance than do other advanced generation antidepressants based on several different ways of assessing the relative incidence of these adverse effects. Reports of sexual dysfunction on nefazodone and bupropion treatment were lower than on treatment with other recently released antidepressants.
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PMID:Comparison of the tolerability of bupropion, fluoxetine, imipramine, nefazodone, paroxetine, sertraline, and venlafaxine. 764 68

Ondansetron and droperidol are both effective in the prevention of postoperative nausea and vomiting (PONV). In this randomized, double-blind study, 80 inpatients scheduled for minor gynecologic surgery received either ondansetron 8 mg intravenously (i.v.) or droperidol 2.5 mg i.v. 5 min prior to induction of isoflurane-narcotic anesthesia. PONV was absent in 68% of the patients after ondansetron and in 88% after droperidol (P < 0.05). The respective times of complete arousal from anesthesia were 171 min and 229 min (P < 0.001). After ondansetron and droperidol, the incidence of severe drowsiness, restlessness, anxiety, or dizziness was 5% and 28%, respectively (P < 0.01). Thus after minor gynecologic surgery, droperidol 2.5 mg i.v. was superior to ondansetron 8 mg i.v. in the prevention of PONV. However, relative to ondansetron, droperidol entailed an average 1-h delay in recovery from anesthesia.
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PMID:Comparison of ondansetron and droperidol in the prevention of nausea and vomiting after inpatient minor gynecologic surgery. 765 30

The antidepressant venlafaxine has a unique chemical structure and neuropharmacologic profile. It significantly inhibits reuptake of both serotonin and norepinephrine and lacks notable muscarinic-cholinergic or alpha-adrenergic effects. Premarketing studies involving more than 2000 patients showed the efficacy of venlafaxine to be significantly greater than placebo at dosages between 75 and 375 mg/day in both outpatients and inpatients. The medication may be administered twice or three times daily. Venlafaxine was found equally effective for patients older and younger than 60 years and in those with psychomotor retardation or agitation; it proved slightly more efficacious than fluoxetine in a comparison study with melancholic inpatients. A promising finding of these studies is the suggestion of a rapid onset of clinical effect for venlafaxine. In some studies, venlafaxine showed a consistent and robust clinical superiority over placebo by Week 1, and in the inpatient study involving melancholic patients, the superiority of venlafaxine was demonstrated as early as Day 4. In general, early responses are seen at the higher dosages. Venlafaxine has also shown promise in treating rigorously defined treatment-refractory depression. The adverse effects of venlafaxine that most often led to discontinuation from a clinical study were nausea (6%), somnolence (3%), insomnia (3%), and dizziness (3%). Although nausea was the most common adverse effect overall, it resolved rapidly--within the first 1 to 3 weeks of therapy. Other adverse events with incidences significantly higher than with placebo were dizziness, constipation, sweating, nervousness, and abnormal ejaculation. The seizure rate and potential for cardiac conduction changes or orthostatic hypotension with venlafaxine were comparable with rates seen with the serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors. A small number of patients experienced dose-dependent blood pressure elevation with venlafaxine in premarketing studies (3% to 5% of those receiving < or = 200 mg/day; 7% of those receiving 201-300 mg/day; 13% of those receiving > 300 mg/day vs. 2% receiving placebo). In general, venlafaxine is well tolerated, and its treatment discontinuation rate is similar to those of the newer antidepressants and superior to discontinuation rates with the first-generation agents.
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PMID:The role of venlafaxine in rational antidepressant therapy. 796 45

We present a 81-year old male who developed dementia, gait disturbance and right hemiparesis. He was well until the age of 74 when he developed a hemorrhagic infarction in the right occipital region, which left him left homonymous hemianopsia. One year later he had one TIA attack consisting of dizziness, headache, and some clouding of consciousness. At that time, atrial fibrillation was found. At age 79, he was attacked by right hemiparesis. Cranial CT scans revealed a lesion consistent with a hemorrhagic infarct in the left middle cerebral artery territory. Two months prior to his final admission, he had a gradual onset of forgetfulness, labile affect, nocturnal agitation and hallucination which were followed by gait disturbance and urinary incontinence. On admission, he was alert but moderately demented. In addition he showed difficulty in repetition, limb kinetic and ideomotor apraxia of the left hand indicative of sympathetic apraxia, and constructional apraxia bilaterally. Granial nerves appeared intact except for left homonymous hemianopsia. His gait was wide-based and small stepped. No weakness or ataxia was noted. Deep reflexes were diminished on the left side. Plantar reflex was equivocally extensor of the left. Light touch and pain was slightly diminished on the right side. Cranial CT scans revealed a large low density area in the left fronto-temporo-parietal region. Also ventricular dilatation, diffuse low density change in the subcortical white matter, and diffuse cortical atrophy were seen. His clinical course was complicated by melena, anemia, pneumonia, cardiac failure and renal failure. He expired 2 months after his admission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 81-year-old man with dementia, gait disturbance, hemiparesis, and sympathetic apraxia]. 833 25

A review was conducted of the safety and tolerability of fluvoxamine in 54 worldwide marketing studies that enrolled 24,624 patients, the majority of whom were treated with fluvoxamine in uncontrolled studies in depression. In accordance with the general epidemiologic distribution of depressive disorder, female patients and patients aged between 30 and 50 years predominated. The majority of patients were treated for 6 weeks, the most frequent, or modal, total daily dose being 100 mg. Overall, 57.4% of the patients exposed to fluvoxamine did not have any adverse experiences. The greatest proportion of adverse experiences, as defined using COSTART body systems, 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%); somnolence (6.9%) and asthenia (6.2%) were the next most frequent adverse experiences. Notably, the rates of agitation and anxiety were only 1.4% and 1.3%, respectively. The incidences of adverse experiences generally increased with age and were slightly higher in females than in males. In total, 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 in association with fluvoxamine treatment was 2.5% when U.S. Food and Drug Administration criteria and the most conservative approach, without causality judgments, were used.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Safety database on fluvoxamine: analysis and report. 837 16

Thirty-one patients, aged 12.6 +/- 5.6 years, with refractory seizures for 8 +/- 4.3 years, were treated with adjunctive vigabatrin. Twenty-four percent had a > 50% reduction in seizure frequency (95% one-sided confidence interval). Generalized myoclonic, atonic, and tonic clonic and partial, with and without secondary generalization, seizures were all reduced at a mean dose of 70 +/- 38 mg/kg/day. Comparison of vigabatrin therapy duration, for partial and generalized seizure groups, utilizing Kaplan-Meier methodology showed similar survival times. Vigabatrin therapy was ineffective in the four children with tuberous sclerosis. Transient somnolence, ataxia and dizziness were the most frequent side effects. A severe aggressive agitation occurred in three patients, and necessitated discontinuation of vigabatrin in one patient. Vigabatrin was as effective in generalized as in partial seizures in this study. Clinical utility may be limited by unacceptable behavioral side effects in some patients.
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PMID:Vigabatrin in childhood epilepsy: comparable efficacy for generalized and partial seizures. 882 92

Aging is a physiological process that shares many behavioral, biochemical and neuroendocrine phenomena with the pathophysiological situation of unresolved stress, as well as with a pharmacologically induced syndrome resulting from chronic benzodiazepine (BZ) consumption. Behavioral findings include symptoms such as drowsiness, ataxia, fatigue, confusion, weakness, dizziness, vertigo, syncope, reversible dementia, depression, impairment of intellectual, psychomotor and sexual function, agitation, auditory and visual hallucinations, paranoid ideation, panic, delirium, depersonalization, sleepwalking, aggressivity, orthostatic hypotension, and insomnia. Neuroendocrine findings include: central depletion of noradrenaline (NA), dopamine, adrenaline (AD), and serotonin (5-HT); reduction in the ratio of circulating NA/AD as well as platelet 5-HT and increase of AD, plasma free 5-HT and cortisol. These disturbances together with the increased platelet aggregability observed in the three groups are typical of unresolved-stress situations. Immunological findings include significant reduction of peripheral T lymphocytes (CD3, CD4, CD8) and the CD4/CD8 ratio, CD16 and gamma-delta cells. On the other hand, the three groups (elderly subjects, subjects faced with unresolved stress, and BZ consumers) show increase of the CD57 lymphocyte subset as well as natural killer cytotoxicity. Alterations of several biological markers have also been found, specifically in the oral glucose tolerance test, the intramuscular clonidine test, and the supine/orthostasis/exercise test. From a clinical point of view, the three groups appear to be more susceptible to the appearance and progression of many acute and chronic diseases (infectious and malignant diseases). As a result, chronic consumption of BZs should be avoided in both the elderly and subjects in unresolved-stress situations.
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PMID:Benzodiazepines: tolerability in elderly patients. 884 97


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