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Query: UMLS:C0020440 (
hypercapnia
)
7,939
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A therapeutic regimen is described for sedative, analgesic, and anti-emetic effect in patients receiving intra-arterial carmustine (BCNU) for malignant gliomas. This regimen consists of nalbuphine, 30 mg, i.v., and droperidol, 2.5 mg, i.v., given immediately prior to intra-carotid BCNU infusion. Droperidol, 2.5 mg, i.v., is then administered on four hour intervals for sixteen hours post-procedure. This combination provided excellent effect in nine patients treated for twelve intra-carotid infusions. None of the nine patients experienced vomiting, one experienced mild nausea several hours post-infusion, and non complained of severe
pain
or discomfort. Thirteen additional patients received diazepam, 10 mg, P.O., prior to the intra-carotid BCNU infusion, with fentanyl, 100 mcg, i.v., and prochlorperazine, 10 mg, i.m. at the onset of infusion. All thirteen patients suffered from severe nausea, vomiting, and orbital
pain
. The nalbuphine/droperidol combination is thought to provide a superior alternative to the traditional narcotic/pheonothiazine/benzodiazepine combination for carotid BCNU infusion. This combination has theoretical advantages for the patient with intracranial mass lesions by providing analgesia and sedation with minimal potential for respiratory depression and
carbon dioxide retention
.
...
PMID:Nalbuphine and droperidol in combination for sedation and prevention of nausea and vomiting during intra-carotid BCNU infusion. 395 77
From this and the previous article, the following points may be offered in summary: When comparing the elderly age group with the general population, the incidence of migraine headaches decreases with age, whereas other etiologies such as glaucoma, temporal arteritis, and cerebrovascular disease may assume a more prominent role in the differential diagnosis. Patients in the geriatric population are frequently taking a multitude of medications, and it is extremely important to carefully evaluate these for possible precipitants of headache. Furthermore, in elderly patients with other potential medical problems, particular attention should be paid to the possibility of various systemic causes of headache. Therapy for specific headache disorders should be tailored to the individual patient. Consider the patient's overall general, psychological, medical, and neurologic background. The physician must be aware of possible interactions of medications with the therapeutic intervention, as well as possible poor tolerance to specific medications due to preexisting medical or neurologic disorders. A complete history, obtaining information on the temporal pattern of headache, the distribution of
pain
, and precipitating and alleviating factors, is extremely important in evaluating the elderly patient. A careful physical examination, paying particular attention to possible disorders of extracranial structures, is indicated. A neurologic exam, including basic tests of higher cortical function, should be obtained. Important additional laboratory investigations include a complete blood count, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and basic blood chemistries. Arterial blood gases should be obtained in patients who have pulmonary disease, a history suggestive of sleep apnea, or other disorders that may produce hypoxia and
hypercarbia
, resulting in vascular headache.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Headaches in older patients: Ddx and Tx of common nonvascular causes. 405 33
In 10 healthy patients, buprenorphine was given as the postoperative analgesic (dosage: peripheral venous injection of 5 microgram/kg BW) after traumatological interventions in the lower extremities, which had been performed under barbiturate-induced halothane anaesthesia. The haemodynamic investigations revealed that buprenorphine has only a minor effect on the high pressure system. In the area of the pulmonary circulation, there was a significant increase in mean pulmonary artery pressure from 15.9 mm Hg to 17.8 mm Hg (+12%), as well as an increase in pulmonary vascular resistance by 16.5%. These changes were most marked 30 to 60 min after the administration of buprenorphine. When 2-3 1 O2/min were administered, none of the patients had PaO2 values of less than 100 mm Hg. 60 min after the injection, the PaCO2 value increased from 33.7 mm Hg to a maximum of 43.9 mm Hg. In 3 patients, PaCO2 increased to more than 45 mm Hg. All patients with greater increases of PaCO2 also evidenced greater increases in the pulmonary vascular resistance. Altogether the haemodynamic changes after buprenorphine administration following halothane anesthesia were not very distinct. In individual cases, however, there were greater increases in PaCO2. The cause of this could involve the additive effects of premedication and anaesthesia medication, and possibly the
pain
level as well. Both the increase in pulmonary artery pressure and the increase in total pulmonary vascular resistance in these patients were due to
hypercapnia
(von Euler-Liljestrand mechanism).
...
PMID:[Buprenorphine as a postoperative analgesic following halothane anesthesia. Hemodynamic and respiratory effects]. 684 82
A few effects of carbon dioxide on
pain
threshold and acid-base balance are known. The purpose of this study was to investigate specifically the variations of analgesia in relation to
hypercapnia
during general anaesthesia and the respective roles played by carbon dioxide and [H+]. The nociceptive jaw opening reflex was studied on five beagle dogs anaesthetized with alfathesin administered at constant rate under acute hypercapnic conditions and acute metabolic acidosis. Acute
hypercapnia
did not decrease the jaw opening reflex significantly until a level was reached where PaCO2 values modified blood [H+] (pH) significantly (10 +/- 1.04 kPa corresponding to [H+] 91.5 +/- 13.24 nmol/l (pH 7.04 +/- 0.06) p less than 0.05)). At [H+] 176.2 +/- 42.77 nmol/l (pH 6.7 +/- 0.13) (p less than 0.01) the reflex was only 9.3 +/- 3.9 per cent (p less than 0.001) of its initial value. The infusion of decinormal solution of HCl during constant capnia caused an abrupt drop of the reflex. There was a correlation between reflex and metabolic acidosis (p less than 0.05). The authors conclude that modification of the jaw opening reflex occurs with extreme values of arterial [H+] incompatible with safe anaesthesia and they discuss the mechanisms involved.
...
PMID:[Comparison of the effects of acute respiratory acidosis and acute metabolic acidosis on the jaw-opening reflex in the anesthetized dog]. 723 18
Circulatory and respiratory effects of alveolar concentrations of 1.31, 1.97, and 2.62 vol% of isoflurane in oxygen were studied in eight young, healthy horses during spontaneous and controlled ventilation. These isoflurane concentrations were equivalent, respectively, to 1.0, 1.5, and 2.0 times the minimal alveolar concentration of isoflurane, which prevents movement in horses in response to a standard
pain
stimulus. Results of the isoflurane studies were compared with similarly derived findings in these same horses during equipotent halothane in oxygen anesthesia. Isoflurane, similar to halothane, produced a dose-related depression of cardiovascular function which was less severe during spontaneous ventilation and associated
hypercapnia
. The two anesthetic agents produced similar circulatory effects during controlled ventilation and constant arterial carbon dioxide tension except for a significantly (P less than 0.05) less depressed cardiac output/kg of body weight and stroke volume that occurred with minimal alveolar concentration 1.5 and 2.0 isoflurane. Total peripheral resistance was greatest when these horses were anesthetized with halothane regardless of the alveolar dose. In horses, isoflurane was, in general, no more depressing than was halothane to circulatory and respiratory function.
...
PMID:Comparison of circulatory and respiratory effects of isoflurane and halothane anesthesia in horses. 740 5
A total of 719 thoracoscopic sympathicotomies were performed at our hospital from October, 1989 to December, 1992. We have been practicing single-lumen endotracheal intubation for general anaesthesia in all of our cases. We will review our experience and discuss our anaesthetic technique and the intraoperative complications encountered as well as post-operative
pain
control. General anaesthesia with controlled manual ventilation assisted the surgeon well and created clear access for electro-cauterisation of the sympathetic chain. Thirty patients were randomly chosen for arterial blood gas analysis. There was no evidence of systemic hypoxaemia or clinically significant
carbon dioxide retention
throughout the surgery or afterwards in the recovery room. In our experience of 719 cases, single-lumen endotracheal intubated anaesthesia is safe and economic for thoracoscopic sympathicotomy.
...
PMID:Single-lumen endotracheal intubated anaesthesia for thoracoscopic sympathectomy--experience of 719 cases. 752 78
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a relatively new surgical procedure which is enjoying ever-increasing popularity and presenting new anesthetic challenges. The advantages of shorter hospital stay and more rapid return to normal activities are combined with less
pain
associated with the small limited incisions and less postoperative ileus compared with the traditional open cholecystectomy. The efficacy of laparoscopic appendectomy and hemicolectomy has been recently evaluated. However, there have been no prospective randomized studies to date comparing laparoscopic with traditional laparotomy techniques. The physiological effects of prolonged pneumoperitoneum and the longer duration of surgery with the laparoscopic techniques are of concern. The application of laparoscopic inguinal hernia repair may be limited because, unlike traditional surgical hepair, general anesthesia is required and concerns have been expressed about the duration of surgery and the possibility of hernia recurrence. Notwithstanding case reports and series describing successful diaphragmatic and hiatus hernia repair using a laparoscopic surgical technique, the frequently encountered complications of cervical surgical emphysema, pneumothorax, and pneumomediastinum, attributed to passage of insufflating gas through weak points or defects in the diaphragm, must be of major concern. Anesthesiologists must maintain a high index of suspicion for these potential complication and must undertake appropriate monitoring. If there is clinical evidence of a tension pneumothorax, immediate chest tube decompression is indicated. Intraoperative complications of laparoscopic surgery are mostly due to traumatic injuries sustained during blind trocar insertion and physiological changes associated with patient positioning and pneumoperitoneum creation. The choice of anesthetic technique for upper abdominal laparoscopic procedures is most frequently limited to general anesthesia. Controlled ventilation avoids
hypercarbia
, and an anesthetic technique incorporating antiemetics and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory agents has reduced postoperative nausea and vomiting following laparoscopic cholecystectomy. The use of nitrous oxide during laparoscopic procedures remains controversial. Laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a major advance in the management of patients with symptomatic gall-bladder disease. However, in the present era of cost containment, older and sicker patients may present for this procedure on the day of surgery without adequate preoperative evaluation. Anesthesiologists should thus be prepared to recommend deflation of the pneumoperitoneum and possibly conversion to an open procedure if hemodynamic, oxygenation, or ventilation difficulties arise during the procedure.
...
PMID:Laparoscopic surgery--anesthetic implications. 783 96
After laparoscopic cholecystectomy, carbon dioxide (CO2) must be exhaled after resorption from the abdominal cavity. There is controversy about the amount and relevance of postoperative CO2 resorption. Without continuous postoperative monitoring, after laparoscopic cholecystectomy a certain risk may consist in unnoticed
hypercapnia
due to CO2 resorption. Studies exist on the course of end-expiratory CO2 (Pe-CO2) alone over a longer postoperative period of time in extubated patients during spontaneous breathing. The goal of this prospective study was to investigate the amount of CO2 resorbed from the abdominal cavity in the postoperative period by means of CO2 metabolism. METHODS. After giving informed consent to the study, which was approved by the local ethics committee, 20 patients underwent laparoscopic cholecystectomy. All patients received general endotracheal anaesthesia. After induction, total IV anaesthesia was maintained using fentanyl, propofol, and atracurium. Patients were ventilated with oxygen in air (FiO2 0.4). The intra-abdominal pressure during the surgical procedure ranged from 12 to 14 mm Hg. Thirty minutes after releasing the capnoperitoneum (KP), CO2 elimination (VCO2), oxygen uptake (VO2), and respiratory quotient (RQ) were measured every minute for 1 h by indirect calorimetry using the metabolic monitor Deltatrac according to the principle of Canopy. Assuming an unchanged metabolism, the CO2 resorption (delta VCO2) at any given time (t) can be calculated from delta VCO2 (t) = VCO2 (t)-RQ(preop) VO2 (t). It was thus necessary to define the patient's metabolism on the day of operation. The first data were collected before surgery and after introduction of the arterial and venous cannulae for a 15-min period. Measuring point 0 was determined after exsufflation of the KP and emptying of the remaining CO2 via manual compression by the surgeon at the end of surgery. Patient's tracheas were extubated and metabolic monitoring started 30 min after release of the KP for 60 min. Simultaneously, a nasal side-stream capnometry probe was placed and the PeCO2 and respiratory frequency (RF) were obtained by the Capnomac Ultima (Datex) and registered every minute as well. Values were averaged over four periods of 15 min each. An arterial blood gas sample was drawn at the end of every 15-min period. Postoperative pain was scored by a visual analog scale and completed by a subjective index questionnaire on general well-being. All data were analysed by the Friedman or Wilcoxon test; P < 0.05 was considered significant. RESULTS. The findings do not indicate CO2 resorption in the postoperative period after laparoscopic cholecystectomy (Tables 2 and 3, Fig. 1). Arterial CO2 as well as PeCO2 were elevated postoperatively (45 mm Hg vs. 36 mm Hg intraoperatively), while VCO2 and VO2 were unchanged when compared to the preoperative measuring period. The postoperative RF was comparable to preoperative values. Calculated delta CO2 was lower than 10 ml/min and within accuracy of measurements. The post-operative
pain
index ranged between 3 and 4, and 3.75-15 mg piritramid was administered. All patients felt tired immediately after the operation, but scores improved slightly at the end of the 60-min period of metabolic monitoring. CONCLUSIONS. There is no significant resorption of CO2 from the abdominal cavity later than 30 min after releasing the KP. Up to this time, any CO2 remaining in the abdominal cavity after careful emptying by the surgeon has been resorbed and exhaled. An increased PeCO2 as late as 30 to 90 min postoperatively should rather be considered a consequence of residual anaesthetics and narcotics than of CO2 resorption.
...
PMID:[Effect of capnoperitoneum on postoperative carbon dioxide homeostasis]. 784 Mar 99
This randomized double-blind study compared the hemodynamic and metabolic effects of pancuronium and vecuronium during treatment of shivering after cardiac surgery with hypothermic cardiopulmonary bypass. Thirty sedated and
pain
-free patients who shivered after cardiac surgery were treated with pancuronium (n = 15) or vecuronium (n = 15) 0.08 mg/kg. Baseline values of heart rate (HR), mean arterial pressure, arterial and venous blood gases, total body oxygen consumption indexed to body surface area (VO2-I), and pressure work index (PWI, an estimate of myocardial oxygen consumption) were measured on arrival in the intensive care unit, at onset of shivering, and repeatedly for 2 h after treatment. Continuous ST segment analysis of leads II and V5 were used for detection of myocardial ischemia. Treatment of shivering with pancuronium decreased VO2-I by 32% (P = 0.0001). This was accompanied by a 14% increase in HR (P = 0.001) and a 10% increase in PWI (P = 0.03). Vecuronium decreased VO2-I by 36% (P = 0.003) with a 4% decrease in HR (P = 0.04) and a 6% decrease in PWI (P = 0.06). Myocardial ischemia (n = 3) and ventricular arrhythmias (n = 3) occurred in five patients treated with pancuronium. Only one patient treated with vecuronium had ventricular arrhythmia (P = 0.08). Seven patients treated with pancuronium and eight treated with vecuronium were taking beta-adrenergic blockers preoperatively which was associated with lower HR (96 +/- 16 vs 109 +/- 15 bpm; P = 0.025) and lower PWI (8.8 +/- 1.2 vs 10.7 +/- 1.92 mL.min-1 x 100 g-1; P = 0.003) at onset of shivering. However, beta-adrenergic blockers did not attenuate the relative HR increase induced by pancuronium. No relationship was found between
hypercapnia
and tachycardia or hypertension. These results suggest that, when compared to pancuronium for treatment of postoperative shivering, vecuronium may be advantageous because it does not increase myocardial work. The disproportionate relationship between VO2-I and PWI after treatment with muscle relaxants indicates that increased VO2-I does not contribute significantly to the hemodynamic disturbances associated with shivering. These disturbances are more likely the results of increased adrenergic activity related to
pain
and recovery from anesthesia. Shivering and its associated hemodynamic disturbances appear to be concomitant but independent signs of awakening.
...
PMID:Pancuronium or vecuronium for treatment of shivering after cardiac surgery. 791 90
Priapism is a persistent erection which fails to subside after climax and is accompanied by penile
pain
and tenderness. The most common form of priapism to confront contemporary urologists is persistence of erection following pharmacologic stimulation. We reviewed our experience over 18 months with initial diagnostic intracavernous challenges of prostaglandin E1. Three-hundred and sixty-six new impotence patients presented to our center and underwent PGE1/color duplex Doppler assessment; 14 patients developed persistent rigidity of two or more hours accompanied by penile discomfort. Each of these patients was successfully managed with penile aspiration and direct corporal instillation of the alpha-adrenergic agonist phenylephrine. The mean PGE1 dosage injected was 6 micrograms and mean duration of erection preceding aspiration 180 minutes. Penile blood gases were obtained from the initial aspirate in all cases. The duration of pharmacologic erections were correlated with the partial pressures of oxygen, carbon dioxide, bicarbonate and the pH using linear regression analysis. There was a clear trend towards deoxygenation, acidosis, and
hypercarbia
with prolonged erection (105-342 minutes). The relationship between duration of pharmacologic erection and acidosis/
hypercarbia
was highly significant.
...
PMID:Pharmacologic erection: time-dependent changes in the corporal environment. 801 18
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