Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026837 (muscle rigidity)
1,077 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The unique features of remifentanil are its rapid clearance and rapid ke0, resulting in a rapid onset and offset of drug effect. It is tempting to speculate that these characteristics will make remifentanil an easy drug to titrate, and that clinicians will not need to consider patient covariates such as advanced age when choosing a dosing regimen. However, the rapid onset of drug effect may be accompanied by rapid onset of adverse events such as apnea and muscle rigidity. The rapid offset of drug effect can result in patients who are in severe pain at a time when the anesthesiologist is ill equipped to deal the problem, for example when the patient is in transit to the recovery room. It is thus important that when treating elderly patients anesthesiologists understand the proper dose adjustment required for the elderly. By adjusting the bolus and infusion doses, the anesthesiologist can hope to avoid the peaks and valleys that might expose these patients to risk. When the proper adjustment is made, the variability in remifentanil pharmacokinetics is considerably less than for any other intravenous opioid. This makes remifentanil the most predictable opioid for treatment of the elderly.
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PMID:The role of newer opioids in geriatric anesthesia. 967 78

The most venomous scorpion species are Buthotus tamulus of India, the Leiurus quinquestriatus and Androctonus crassicauda of North Africa and the Middle East, the Tityus serrulatus of Brazil, and the Centruroides suffussus of Mexico. The severity of scorpion envenomation varies with the scorpion's species, age, and size, and is much greater in children. Systemic intoxication reflects the overstimulation of the CNS, the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous system. Severity ranges from local pain and paresthesia to fatal cardiotoxicity and encephalopathy. Symptoms include: agitation, tachycardia, vomiting, abdominal pain, salivation, diaphoresis, dehydration, muscle rigidity and twitching, tremor, seizures, coma, pupillary changes, hyperthermia, tachyarrythmias and occasionally bradyarrhythmias, hypertension, and less often hypotension, cardiac failure, and priapism in males. Laboratory abnormalities include: hyperglycemia, leucocytosis, transient elevation of cardiac and pancreatic enzymes, ischemic changes in the ECG, and evidence of cardiac dysfunction on echocardiography. The principles of management are: observation, cardiac monitoring, supportive treatment with intravenous fluids and electrolytes, and a meticulous use of cardiovascular agents: vasodilators, adrenergic antagonists, or calcium channel blockers in the hypertensive phase; and inotropic agents in the event of hypotension. Antiarrhythmics such as lidocaine, may be required. There is increasing evidence for the efficacy of specific antivenom. The advance in supportive care and antivenom efficacy has markedly improved the outcome of patients with scorpion envenomation.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations and management of scorpion envenomation. 1044 63

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic progressive neurological disorder characterized by tremor, muscle rigidity, slowness of movement (bradykinesia), and gait instability. In early disease, PD is well managed in an office setting, however, as the disease progresses, a variety of syndromes may result in emergency department visits. The scenarios most likely to require an emergent evaluation are severe motor "off" periods with immobility, involuntary movements (dyskinesia), psychosis, acute confusion, panic disorder, and pain. Other less frequent presentations are also discussed. This article uses illustrative cases to provide a framework to discuss emergency department diagnosis and management issues in caring for these patients.
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PMID:Emergency department presentations of patients with Parkinson's disease. 1075 Sep 35

Most traditional opioids and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs that are used to control perioperative pain have substantial side effects. The number of choices in clinical use was recently increased by two promising groups of drugs: N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists and central alpha2 agonists. One N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist, dextromethorphan, blocks the generation of central pain sensation that arise from peripheral nociceptive stimuli by moderating the activity of N-methyl-D-aspartate. It pre-empts the sensation of acute pain at doses of 30-90 mg without serious side effects, while reducing the amount of analgesics required perioperatively by 50%. It is available in oral form and has a confirmed lack of effect on haemodynamics and respiration. Dexmedetomidine is a relatively new, highly selective central alpha2 agonist. Its sedative, pro-anaesthetic and pro-analgesic effects at 0.5-2 microg/kg given intravenously stem mainly from its ability to blunt the central sympathetic response by as yet unknown mechanism(s) of action. It also minimises opioid-induced muscle rigidity, lessens postoperative shivering, causes minimal respiratory depression, and has haemodynamic stabilising effects.
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PMID:Dextromethorphan and dexmedetomidine: new agents for the control of perioperative pain. 1171 40

Assessing abdominal complications in patients who have previously suffered high spinal cord injury is very difficult because the resultant loss of sensory, motor, and reflux function of the abdominal wall can mask the typical signs of acute abdomen such as tenderness, muscle rigidity, and peritoneal rebound pain. We recently diagnosed a small intestinal perforation in a 77-year-old man with a C6-7 spinal cord injury sustained 14 years earlier. The patient was correctly diagnosed as having an acute abdominal condition, despite palsy of abdominal wall sensation. An emergency laparotomy was done and a 40-cm length of affected ileum, about 180 cm distal to the Treitz ligament, including a 1-cm perforation, was resected, followed by an end-to-end anastomosis. We report this case to raise awareness of the need for appropriate diagnosis and early surgical treatment of abdominal complications in spinal-cord-injured patients.
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PMID:Ileal perforation in a patient with high spinal cord injury: report of a case. 1471 32

Stiff-Person Syndrome (SPS) is a very rare disorder characterised by progressive fluctuating muscle rigidity and episodic spasm. So far, only two reports have demonstrated a significant clinical improvement in the patients with SPS when muscle were injected with Botulinum Toxin A (BTA). We investigated the effectiveness of intramuscular injections of BTA in a patient with clinical, biochemical and electrophysiological evidence of SPS. A 41-year-old woman with coexisting epilepsy and insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus was hospitalised in our Department because of stiffness and paroxysmal spasm of trunk and proximal limbs muscles. Because of not sufficient results of the pharmacological treatment the injections of BTA into involved muscles were done. Clinical observations included measure of pain, frequency of spasm, well-being and selection's activities were performed at baseline and in 1, 2, 7, 11, 16, 20, weeks. Significant improvement started one week after injections and lasting about 4 months was observed. Using BTA injections into involved muscles for the treatment of SPS can be followed by marked functional improvement and reducing the need for systemic drugs.
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PMID:[Botulinum toxin A in the treatment of stiff man syndrome]. 1509 44

Most opioids used in anaesthesia are of the anilidopiperidine family, including fentanyl, alfentanil, sufentanil and remifentanil. While all share similar pharmacological properties, remifentanil, the newest one, is probably the most original, which is the reason this review focusses especially on this drug. Remifentanil is a potent mu-agonist that retains all the pharmacodynamic characteristics of its class (regarding analgesia, respiratory depression, muscle rigidity, nausea and vomiting, pruritus, etc.) but with a unique pharmacokinetic profile that combines a short onset and the fastest offset, independent of the infusion duration. Consequently, it offers a unique titratability when its effects need to be quickly achieved or suppressed, but it requires specific drug delivery schemes such as continuous infusion, target-controlled infusion and anticipated postoperative pain treatment. Kinetic differences between opioids used in anaesthesia and some clinical uses of remifentanil are reviewed in this chapter.
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PMID:Remifentanil and other opioids. 1817 97

Medications which bind to opioid receptors are increasingly being prescribed for the treatment of multiple and diverse chronic painful conditions. Their use for acute pain or terminal pain is well accepted. Their role in the long-term treatment of chronic noncancer pain is, however, controversial for many reasons. One of the primary reasons is the well-known phenomenon of psychological addiction that can occur with the use of these medications. Abuse and diversion of these medications is a growing problem as the availability of these medications increases and this public health issue confounds their clinical utility. Also, the extent of their efficacy in the treatment of pain when utilized on a chronic basis has not been definitively proven. Lastly, the role of opioids in the treatment of chronic pain is also influenced by the fact that these potent analgesics are associated with a significant number of side effects and complications. It is these phenomena that are the focus of this review. Common side effects of opioid administration include sedation, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, constipation, physical dependence, tolerance, and respiratory depression. Physical dependence and addiction are clinical concerns that may prevent proper prescribing and in turn inadequate pain management. Less common side effects may include delayed gastric emptying, hyperalgesia, immunologic and hormonal dysfunction, muscle rigidity, and myoclonus. The most common side effects of opioid usage are constipation (which has a very high incidence) and nausea. These 2 side effects can be difficult to manage and frequently tolerance to them does not develop; this is especially true for constipation. They may be severe enough to require opioid discontinuation, and contribute to under-dosing and inadequate analgesia. Several clinical trials are underway to identify adjunct therapies that may mitigate these side effects. Switching opioids and/or routes of administration may also provide benefits for patients. Proper patient screening, education, and preemptive treatment of potential side effects may aid in maximizing effectiveness while reducing the severity of side effects and adverse events. Opioids can be considered broad spectrum analgesic agents, affecting a wide number of organ systems and influencing a large number of body functions.
Pain Physician 2008 Mar
PMID:Opioid complications and side effects. 1844 35

Although mu-opioids such as morphine are undoubtedly effective in the treatment of acute and postoperative pain, kappa-opioids are of interest for the modulation of visceral pain. In the present study, we compared a kappa-opioid agonist (U50488-H; 0.63-40 mg/kg) with a mu-opioid agonist (morphine; 0.63-40 mg/kg) in different pain models (tail withdrawal, writhing, formalin and plantar test) to represent acute, peritoneovisceral and inflammatory pain states in rats. The effects of the respective receptor agonists on gastrointestinal motility, muscle rigidity and abuse liability were also studied in appropriate animal models (charcoal, castor oil, rotarod and drug discrimination learning). Morphine was highly efficacious in all the nociceptive models employed, but also elicited a potent inhibition of gastric motility, caused severe muscle rigidity and locomotor disturbances and displayed a potential for abuse liability at the higher doses tested (> or =10 mg/kg morphine). In contrast, U50488-H was inactive in the tail withdrawal test, but was more effective in visceral and inflammatory pain settings. Although U50488-H did not elicit any gastrointestinal inhibition, a loss of muscle tone following administration of the compound led to detrimental effects on rotarod performance. The findings presented here indicate that kappa-opioids possess antinociceptive efficacy in visceral and inflammatory pain settings, but their administration can lead to a loss of muscle tone. In contrast, mu-opioids are highly active as analgesics against a range of nociceptive stimuli, but also concomitantly elicit strongly adverse effects.
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PMID:Antinociceptive and adverse effects of mu- and kappa-opioid receptor agonists: a comparison of morphine and U50488-H. 1869 97

An 18-year-old woman was treated with neuroleptic analgesia using fentanyl, morphine, droperidol and haloperidol for general anesthesia and pain control for her knee operation. Postoperatively, she showed emotional unstableness, following dyspnea, tachycardia, fever, hyperhydrosis, muscle rigidity and myoclonus like involuntary movement. She received infusion of 140 mg dantrolene in total under suspicion of having neuroleptic malignant syndrome, but her symptoms improved slightly. After being transferred to our hospital, she exhibited immobility, mutism, rigidity, and catalepsy, and she was suspected of having lethal catatonia. Infusion of diazepam 10 mg resulted in dramatical improvement of her symptoms. Differential diagnosis between neuroleptic malignant syndrome and catatonia is difficult; however, a first line therapy is differential diagnosis. Thus, physician should consider catatonia when treating neuroleptic malignant like syndrome.
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PMID:[Case with difficulty in differentiating between transient neuroleptic malignant syndrome and catatonia after neuroleptic analgesia]. 2016 67


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