Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) has been widely used for monitoring the abnormal nerve conduction in various diseases. In non-anesthetized patients, Abeta fibers are electrically stimulated during SEP measurements. In anesthesiological field, it is used as a short latency somatosensory potential (SSEP), because its latency and amplitude are relatively constant. To detect the conduction abnormality from the upper extremities to the brain, median nerve stimulation is used. For the detection of spinal cord abnormality during operation, posterior tibial nerve stimulation is often used. It is important to know the origin of the wave appearing in SSEP to find the lesion in the nervous system. SSEP has been used in scoliosis surgery, carotid endarterectomy, thoracoabodominal aortic surgery and cervical operations to detect brain and spinal ischemia. In an intensive care unit, it is used for the diagnosis of brain death or ischemia and other neuronal diseases such as Guillain-Barre syndrome and polyneuritis etc. In pain clinic, laser evoked potential (LEP) has been recently introduced for the analysis of the mechanisms of nerve and spinal cord diseases. Using the LEP, pain mechanism would be clarified. During SSEP measurements, it is necessary for the anesthesiologists, intensivists and pain clinicians to understand the effect of anesthetic drugs and hypothermia on SSEP.
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PMID:[Somatosensory evoked potential]. 1654 77

Contributions from the neurosciences to Critical Care in 2011 covered an array of topics. We learned about potential biomarkers for, and the effect of cerebral oxygen metabolism on, delirium, in addition to treatment of the latter. A group of investigators studied surface cooling in healthy awake volunteers, and incidence of infection associated with therapeutic hypothermia. The effects of statin and erythropoietin on stroke were revisited, and the role of adhesion molecule in the inflammatory reaction accompanying intracerebral hemorrhage was scrutinized. Biomarkers in subarachnoid hemorrhage and their relationship to vasospasm and outcome, and effect of daylight on outcome in this patient population, as well as a new meta-analysis of statin therapy were among the research in subarachnoid hemorrhage. Moreover, 2011 witnessed the publication of a multidisciplinary consensus conference's recommendations on the critical care management of subarachnoid hemorrhage. Results of studies regarding the diagnosis and vascular complications of meningitis were reported. Traumatic brain injury received its share of articles addressing therapy with hypertonic saline and surgical decompression, the development of coagulopathy, and biomarkers to help with prognostication. Finally, research on the treatment of Guillain-Barre syndrome in children, prediction of long-term need of ventilatory support, and pathophysiology of critical illness polyneuropathy and myopathy were reported.
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PMID:Year in review 2011: Critical Care--Neurocritical care. 2325 71