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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Sixty patients out of 1,844 recovery room admissions had significant postoperative arterial hypertension. Nearly 60% of them had a history of hypertension. The postoperative hypertension usually began within 30 min from the end of operation and lasted about 2 hours. In 20% of the patients it lasted 3 hours or longer. Complications attributable to hypertension were confined to this latter group. The principal factors possibly contributing to the pressure elevations were
pain
(35%),
hypercarbia
(15%) and emergence excitement (16%). Ten of the patients (17%) had no demonstrable cause for hypertension. The hypertension in this group appeared to have a shorter and more benign course.
...
PMID:Hypertension in the immediate postoperative period. 23 47
Water balance is tightly regulated within a tolerance of less than 1 percent by a physiologic control system located in the hypothalamus. Body water homeostasis is achieved by balancing renal and nonrenal water losses with appropriate water intake. The major stimulus to thirst is increased osmolality of body fluids as perceived by osmoreceptors in the anteroventral hypothalamus. Hypovolemia also has an important effect on thirst which is mediated by arterial baroreceptors and by the renin-angiotensin system. Renal water loss is determined by the circulating level of the antidiuretic hormone, arginine vasopressin (AVP). AVP is synthesized in specialized neurosecretory cells located in the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei in the hypothalamus and is transported in neurosecretory granules down elongated axons to the posterior pituitary. Depolarization of the neurosecretory neurons results in the exocytosis of the granules and the release of AVP and its carrier protein (neurophysin) into the circulation. AVP is secreted in response to a wide variety of stimuli. Change in body fluid osmolality is the most potent factor affecting AVP secretion, but hypovolemia, the renin-angiotensin system, hypoxia,
hypercapnia
, hyperthermia and
pain
also have important effects. Many drugs have been shown to stimulate the release of AVP as well. Small changes in plasma AVP concentration of from 0.5 to 4 muU per ml have major effects on urine osmolality and renal water handling.
...
PMID:The clinical physiology of water metabolism. Part I: The physiologic regulation of arginine vasopressin secretion and thirst. 39 80
A statistical analysis of the case material at the Intensive Care Unit, Freiburg, for the years 1975 and 1976 established that 40% and 39% respectively of patients with multiple injuries had also suffered a chest trauma and that the latter was the direct cause of respiratory insufficiency in 61% (1975) and 57% (1976) of patients in need of controlled respiration, i.e. respiratory insufficiency dominated the clinical and pathophysiological picture. The causes were: restricted respiratory movements due to
pain
, compression of the lungs or pathological changes in the injured lung, and they affected the normal gaseous exchange in a variety of ways. Alveolar hypoventilation with disturbance of ventilation-perfusion, increase in the functional shunt volume, rise in the functional dead space combined with reduced functional residual capacity and compliance result, if left uncorrected, in a drastic increase of resistance on the part of the pulmonary vessels and finally in, often fatal, hyoxaemia and
hypercapnia
. Regular estimations of the arterial blood gases in air and pure oxygen, of the arterio-alveolar difference in oxygen pressure, shunt volume, dead space and effective compliance of the chest wall and lungs are, therefore, essential. Treatment in an intensive care unit comprises the relief of any acute condition, such as tension pneumothorax, haemothorax, and general measures. Means to relieve
pain
in patients whose chest injuries are not sufficiently severe to require artificial ventilation are: intercostal blocking, acupuncture or peridural analgesia; efficient breathing exercises are important. The indications for artificial ventilation should be interpreted generously and the decision to perform it should be made at an early stage. The technique is determined by the type of pathological changes in the gaseous exchange and should aim at restoring normal conditions as far as possible.
...
PMID:[Intensive care in chest trauma (author's transl)]. 46 37
This study examined respiratory function and metabolic and subjective responses in patients undergoing laparoscopic (n = 10) and open (n = 11) cholecystectomy for chronic cholecystitis and biliary colic. Patient groups were matched for age, sex, weight and height. The duration of operation was similar in both groups. Respiratory function tests (vital capacity, forced expiratory volume in 1 s, peak flow and arterial blood gases), urinary cortisol, vanillylmandelic acid, metanephrines and nitrogen loss, serum complement component C3 and C-reactive protein (CRP), full blood count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and subjective responses as assessed on a
pain
analogue scale and by analgesic usage were determined for up to 48 h after surgery. Deterioration in perioperative respiratory function was significantly less for laparoscopic surgery. Arterial blood gas determinations indicated a greater perioperative decrease in arterial pH, with
carbon dioxide retention
in patients undergoing open cholecystectomy (P < 0.02), reflecting poorer respiratory performance. Hormonal profile changes demonstrated an increase in urinary vanillylmandelic acid in the laparoscopic cholecystectomy group (P < 0.04); no differences were detected in urinary cortisol, metanephrine or nitrogen excretion. Acute-phase responses were greatest in patients undergoing open cholecystectomy as determined by ESR and CRP level (P < 0.02 and P < 0.003, respectively).
Pain
and analgesic usage were significantly decreased in the laparoscopic cholecystectomy group (P < 0.0009) and P < 0.0001), which led to a decreased hospital stay after operation in these patients (P < 0.0001). These data indicate improved respiratory and subjective responses and diminished acute-phase responses associated with laparoscopic surgery. Catabolic hormone release may, however, be increased.
...
PMID:Physiological and metabolic responses to open and laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 847 69
Acute postoperative hypertension (APH) has been documented in the PACU. Over half of the patients who exhibit APH have pre-existing primary hypertension. Sustained blood pressure (BP) elevation increases the risk of myocardial ischemia, infarction, surgical site bleeding, or cerebral hemorrhage in these patients. Following surgery and anesthesia, increased sympathetic stimulation caused by a high level of circulating catecholamines can lead to APH. Some direct perioperative stimulants include
pain
, anxiety, hypoxia,
hypercapnia
, hypothermia, shivering, volume overload, and bladder distension. Nursing interventions are directed toward identifying and relieving the cause of APH. Antihypertensive drug therapy with vasodilators or adrenergic inhibitors is used if initial nursing interventions are not effective. Vasodilators frequently used are hydralazine, sodium nitroprusside, and nitroglycerin. Nicardipine has recently been introduced as an intravenous calcium channel blocker. Vasodilators are effective in BP reduction but may cause reflex tachycardia when used alone. Adrenergic inhibitors, such as esmolol and labetalol, block alpha and/or beta receptors to decrease heart rate and BP. Labetalol's effectiveness, relative freedom from side effects, and ease of administration have made it a useful drug in the treatment of APH.
...
PMID:Acute postoperative hypertension in the hypertensive patient. 173 70
Hypoventilation produces
hypercapnia
which can elevate
pain
thresholds.
Hypercapnia
is a potent stressor which releases catecholamines and activates the sympathetic nervous system. Some stressors produce analgesia by releasing endogenous opioids. To determine the roles of endogenous opioids and catecholamines in hypercapnic analgesia, we administered CO2 in the inspired gas mixture to conscious rats. CO2 in the range 5-10% elevated tail flick and leg flexion latencies 2- to 3-fold in both intact and spinalised animals. The effects on reflex latencies but not on paCO2 or pHa were blocked by naloxone (2 mg/kg), and were not present in morphine-tolerant animals. The effects were reduced by dexamethasone but were not changed either by adrenalectomy or by systemic guanethidine, propanolol or phentolamine.
Hypercapnia
delayed the onset of the late phase of behavioural responses to formalin injected into the plantar surface of the hindpaw. We conclude that moderate
hypercapnia
powerfully depresses flexor withdrawal responses to noxious stimuli, by a mechanism involving release of endogenous opioids but not systemic catecholamines. This effect may account in part for the elevation in
pain
threshold during hypoventilation.
...
PMID:Hypercapnia depresses nociception: endogenous opioids implicated. 235 37
Thoracic epidural fentanyl has been used successfully for postoperative analgesia in patients undergoing thoracic surgery. Prior investigators have suggested that increasing the administered dosage and volume of lumbar epidural fentanyl may increase the spread of analgesia. The feasibility of injecting a high volume (20 mL) of fentanyl into the lumbar epidural space for post-thoracic surgery analgesia was studied in 17 patients undergoing elective thoracotomy or sternotomy. All patients had a lumbar epidural catheter placed before induction of general anesthesia. No narcotic was administered during surgery. Thirty minutes before the conclusion of anesthesia, 200 micrograms of fentanyl in 16 mL of 0.9% saline was administered via the epidural route. In the intensive care unit (ICU), additional fentanyl in the same dosage and volume was injected when the patient complained of
pain
.
Pain
was scored on a linear analog scale pre-injection and 30 minutes post-injection. Arterial blood gases were obtained simultaneously. All patients experienced
pain
relief within 15 minutes of injection. No significant respiratory depression or
hypercarbia
was noted. Lumbar epidural fentanyl is a safe and practical alternative to thoracic epidural analgesia in the post-thoracic surgical patient.
...
PMID:Lumbar epidural fentanyl analgesia after thoracic surgery. 251 38
Arterial hypertension developed in a horse anesthetized for arthroscopy and lavage of an inflamed right carpal joint. Anesthesia was induced with xylazine HCl, butorphanol, guaifenesin, and thiamylal Na and was maintained with halothane in oxygen. Arterial hypertension and tachycardia developed within 15 minutes after a pneumatic tourniquet was placed 8 to 10 cm proximal to the right carpus and inflated to 800 mm of Hg. The surgical procedure was expedited, halothane was discontinued and anesthesia was maintained with guaifenesin to facilitate bandaging. Heart rate decreased from 72 to 42 beats/min after the tourniquet cuff was deflated. Mean arterial pressure decreased from 260 mm of Hg to 128 mm of Hg. Differential diagnosis for a rapidly increasing arterial pressure during halothane anesthesia include inadequate plane of anesthesia, signs of
pain
,
hypercapnia
, hypoxemia, and/or hyperthermia.
...
PMID:Tourniquet-induced hypertension in a horse. 291 9
Hypercapnia
in patients with pulmonary disease is believed to result from an interaction between mechanical lung impairment and intrinsic chemical respiratory drive. We tested this hypothesis in this study by examining the ventilatory (delta VE/delta PCO2) and occlusion pressure (delta P100/delta PCO2) responses to CO2 in 12 obese patients with no history of alveolar hypoventilation and correlating these with their ventilatory responses to abdominal surgery. Preoperatively the mean vital capacity (VC) was 78% +/- 6% standard error of the mean predicted, the delta VE/delta PCO2 was 1.56 +/- 0.26 L/min/torr, delta P100/delta PCO2 was 0.25 +/- 0.08 cm H2O/torr, the mean PaCO2 37.9 +/- 1.1 mm Hg, and mean PO2 77.6 +/- 3.7 mm Hg. Postoperatively the VC decreased to 56% +/- 6% of the preoperative value. PCO2 values at 24 hours increased in six patients, were unchanged in three, and decreased in three patients. However, over the entire spectrum of PCO2 change, both indexes of CO2 chemosensitivity correlated strongly with the postoperative change in PCO2 (r = -0.86 for delta VE/delta PCO2 and r = -0.66 for delta P100/delta PCO2). All six patients with a delta VE/delta PCO2 of 1.5 L/min/torr or less manifested postoperative increases in PCO2, while those with greater values did not (p = 0.005). In contrast, neither preoperative nor postoperative VC showed high correlations with postoperative PCO2 (r = -0.56 and -0.43, respectively). Thus ventilatory responses to CO2 predicted postoperative PCO2 at both ends of the spectrum; low responders hypoventilated while high responders hyperventilated. We conclude that in obese subjects, CO2 chemosensitivity plays a permissive role in determining the net ventilatory responses to situations that either mechanically load the respiratory system or modulate ventilation such as postoperative
pain
or analgesia.
...
PMID:Chemical respiratory drive as a determinant of postoperative ventilation in the non-Pickwickian obese patient. 310 48
A 52-year-old woman presented with increasing
pain
, weakness, and paraesthesiae of four months' duration in the lower limbs. She suffered from chronic obstructive airways disease and hypertension. Neurological examination revealed wasting of the quadriceps muscles, weakness of the lower limbs, and absent ankle jerks. The sensory examination was normal. Full blood count, ESR, biochemical, immunological, and viral studies, urinary heavy metal assays, and cerebrospinal fluid examination were normal. Nerve conduction studies were consistent with a sensorimotor neuropathy, and electromyographic sampling was consistent with acute denervation. A sural nerve biopsy showed axonal degeneration and segmental demyelination. One month after admission, she developed
carbon dioxide retention
. Her weakness spread to affect the upper limbs, and she could not be resuscitated after a cardiac arrest three months after admission. General autopsy examination revealed bronchopneumonia. Neuropathological examination showed a lymphocytic infiltrate in the nerve roots of the cauda equina, the lumbosacral plexus, and the sural and vagal nerves. Increased cellularity and collagen were evident in these nerves. A diagnosis of chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy was made. The neuropathology of this entity is discussed.
...
PMID:Neuropathological findings in a case of chronic inflammatory polyneuropathy. 384 15
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