Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Use of propofol in surgery on critical patients is limited because of the possibility of poorly corrected hypotonia. The effects of total anesthesia with propofol + fentanyl + nitric oxide under conditions of artificial ventilation of the lungs (tracrium) were evaluated during 63 operations on 42 patients with severe burns (ASA III-IV), divided into 2 groups depending on the protocol of anesthesia. The difference in the protocols consisted in the method of choice of anesthetic doses: in group A we proceeded from EEG data (bispectral index--BIS) and in group B relied only on general clinical and hemodynamic signs with a retrospective analysis of BIS. Prevention of hemodynamic disorders in both groups included infusion loading (7-8 ml/kg), dopamine (5-7 micrograms/kg/min) and decrease of the velocity of propofol infusion to 15 mg/kg/h during induction anesthesia. This method leveled the hypodynamic effects of propofol. Simultaneous monitoring of BIS showed that the propofol dose needed for adequate induction narcosis with subsequent intubation should be higher than the dose usually recommended for patients with ASA class III-IV. Use of BIS monitoring during the operation resulted in a decrease of the propofol and fentanyl doses. The authors do not recommend decreasing the velocity of propofol infusion below 3 mg/kg/h (at FiN2) = 0.6) because of the risk of awakening during narcosis.
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PMID:[Propofol-based protocol of general anesthesia for operations in patients with severe burns with ASA class III-IV]. 1222 78

Stiff-person syndrome is a rare disease characterized by muscle rigidity and painful spasms in the axial and limb muscles. The authors reported here a case of an axilally lymphadenectomy in a 46-year-old woman with stiff-person syndrome. With train of four ratio (TOFR) monitoring at the ulnar nerve, general anesthesia was induced and maintained with fentanyl, vecuronium and propofol with target controlled infusion. A TOFR, BIS monitor and invasive arterial pressure monitoring were employed. During the operation, there was no muscle rigidity and spasm. Ten minutes after the operation, she was fully awake and train of four ratio recovered to 95%, and extubated uneventfully. We chose propofol, because of previous reports about prolonged hypotonicity by interaction of baclofen and isoflurane. Preoperative good symptom control, choice of total intravenous anesthesia (TIVA), and application of the electrical nerve stimulator prevented postoperative hypotonia and resulted in safe anesthetic management.
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PMID:[Anesthesia for a patient with stiff-person syndrome]. 1841 1