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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study is the first attempt to characterize neurological and behavioural consequences of fluid-percussion concussive head injury in the cat. Both animals initially anaesthetized by
N2O
as well as unanaesthetized, chronically prepared animals were subjected to injury. Injury with a fluid-pressure wave of 1.9-2.5 atm (duration 21-24 ms) produced a brief generalized areflexia. Following this initial response, injury greater than 2.1 atm frequently produced a period associated with
hypotonia
of postural muscles and suppression of postural motor responses (flaccidity). A close association between flaccidity and other indices of coma such as absence of eye-opening responses was noted. These consequences of injury can occur without fatal apnoae, circulatory collapse or overt intraparenchymal haemorrhages. This result suggests that mechanical stress predominantly restricted to the brain stem in fluid percussion may be sufficient, at least in the cat, to produce coma associated with flaccidity which has been previously documented for acceleration concussion. There was no evidence that fluid percussion produced EEG depression similar to the effects of lesions in the mesencephalic reticular activating system (RAS). Thus, depression of general levels of brain activity including those within the RAS seems not be necessary for production of this form of reversible coma.
...
PMID:Coma associated with flaccidity produced by fluid-percussion concussion in the cat. I: Is it due to depression of activity within the brainstem reticular formation? 316 67
A patient with Prader-Willi syndrome developed bronchospasm during anesthesia. The patient was a 9-year-old boy and was scheduled for orchiopexy. His psychomotor development was delayed, and at 12 months of age he was diagnosed as Prader-Willi syndrome by chromosomal examination. The patient weighed 17 kg, was 111 cm tall, and had no symptom of upper respiratory infection preoperatively. Preoperative examinations were normal except supraventricular extrasystole in electrocardiogram. Following administration of scopolamine 0.15 mg intramuscularly as preanesthetic medication, anesthesia was induced smoothly by slow induction using
N2O
-O2-sevoflurane. However, right after endotracheal intubation with vecuronium 2 mg, remarkable stridor was noticed. Despite hyperventilation, the patient exhibited hypercapnia, and the diagnosis of bronchospasm was made. Aminophylline and steroid were administered intravenously and halothane was inhaled instead of sevoflurane. The bronchospasm was improved gradually and surgery was finished. Prader-Willi syndrome is an uncommon disease first reported by Prader in 1956 and characterized by
hypotonia
, hypomentia, hypogonadism and obesity. In the perioperative management for a patient with Prader-Willi syndrome, special attention must be paid to the abnormalities in the upper and lower respiratory systems.
...
PMID:[Bronchospasm during anesthesia in a patient with Prader-Willi syndrome]. 858 65
The case of a woman of 27 affected by the Prader-Willi syndrome who underwent general anaesthesia for dental surgery is reported. The patient presented severe mental retardation, small stature, moderate muscular
hypotonia
, hyperphagia, obesity, and diabetes mellitus. Premedication consisted of diazepam and atropine; anaesthesia was induced with propofol and maintained with propofol, fentanyl and
N2O
; muscle paralysis was obtained with atracurium. A small glottis was observed at laryngoscopy so that a 6 mm cuffed tube was inserted. Surgery lasted 75 minutes; the patient recovered promptly a few minutes following the end of propofol infusion; no postoperative complication was recorded. As hypoglycemia can occur during and after surgery in the Prader-Willi syndrome, plasma samples for glucose, NEFA, insulin, cortisol, and growth hormone (GH) were collected prior to the induction of anaesthesia (A), 20 minutes after starting surgery (B), at the end of surgery (C), and 3 hours later (D). In spite of the infusion of glucose, hyperglycemia was observed just in C and D samples (A:77; B:88; C:245; D:279 mg/dl). Stable NEFA values, within the normal range, were observed (A:77; B:88; C:245; D:279 mg/dl) suggesting poor or absent lipolysis. Insulin decreased progressively during surgery (A:10.5; B:8.8; C:5.4; D:7.0 mU/L). Cortisol peaked in B (A:9.5; B:20.9; C:13.4; D:4.8 micrograms/dl), suggesting normal hypothalamic reactivity to the surgical stimulus. Finally very low GH levels were observed (A:0.04; B:0.07; C:0.06; D:0.09 ng/ml) suggesting GH deficiency, which had possibly affected the size of patient's glottis. Our data support the hypothesis that hypoglycemia in the Prader-Willi syndrome originates from inadequate lipolysis during starvation.
...
PMID:[General anesthesia in Prader-Willi syndrome]. 910 80