Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Etomidate was compared to thiopentone sodium as an induction agent in 132 out-patients undergoing sterilization by laparoscopy and cauterization of the oviduct. Neither agent caused any significant effects on heart rate or blood pressure. Etomidate-induced patients had a statistically significantly quicker return of awareness post-operatively. In a further large series (164) of out-patients undergoing minor surgery, the average stay in hospital post-operatively was 1 hour 30 minutes. Side-effects were rare and did not include, with this technique, significant myoclonus or pain on injection.
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PMID:Etomidate as an induction agent in minor operative procedures. 37 55

At present there are two methods of management of tinnitus: one old, by masking with a noise generator, and one new, by biofeedback. Neither of these methods is convenient and neither gets at the heart of the problem. A third method, using intravenous lidocaine as a test and oral carbamazepine therapy, was developed in the Pain Clinic of the Auckland General Hospital in New Zealand. This paper will report our brief experience with these drugs in the management of tinnitus and other similar disorders. Twenty-seven patients with intractable tinnitus had a significant reduction from a test dose of intravenous lidocaine and were treated with oral carbamazepine. Of this group 1 patient (4%) had complete relief, 21 patients (78%) had partial relief, and 5 patients (18%) had no relief. Complications were few and not serious, and either disappeared spontaneously or when the carbamazepine was stopped. One patient with palatal myoclonus, refractory to all other forms of treatment, had complete relief on a small dose of carbamazepine. It may be that palatal myoclonus, hemifacial spasm, and other such clonic convulsive disorders will be amenable to the same treatment.
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PMID:Management of tinnitus aurium with lidocaine and carbamazepine. 68 4

Animal data indicate that serotonin (5-HT) is a major neurotransmitter involved in the control of numerous central nervous system functions including mood, aggression, pain, anxiety, sleep, memory, eating behavior, addictive behavior, temperature control, endocrine regulation, and motor behavior. Moreover, there is evidence that abnormalities of 5-HT functions are related to the pathophysiology of diverse neurological conditions including Parkinson's disease, tardive dyskinesia, akathisia, dystonia, Huntington's disease, familial tremor, restless legs syndrome, myoclonus, Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome, multiple sclerosis, sleep disorders, and dementia. The psychiatric disorders of schizophrenia, mania, depression, aggressive and self-injurious behavior, obsessive compulsive disorder, seasonal affective disorder, substance abuse, hypersexuality, anxiety disorders, bulimia, childhood hyperactivity, and behavioral disorders in geriatric patients have been linked to impaired central 5-HT functions. Tryptophan, the natural amino acid precursor in 5-HT biosynthesis, increases 5-HT synthesis in the brain and, therefore, may stimulate 5-HT release and function. Since it is a natural constituent of the diet, tryptophan should have low toxicity and produce few side effects. Based on these advantages, dietary tryptophan supplementation has been used in the management of neuropsychiatric disorders with variable success. This review summarizes current clinical use of tryptophan supplementation in neuropsychiatric disorders.
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PMID:L-tryptophan in neuropsychiatric disorders: a review. 130 30

A 30-year-old man with chronic abdominal pain was treated with high doses of hydromorphone intravenously and developed severe and frequent myoclonic contractions. Several medications including lorazepam failed to control the contractions; however, clonazepam in normal doses reduced the myoclonus dramatically.
Pain 1992 May
PMID:Clonazepam treatment of myoclonic contractions associated with high-dose opioids: case report. 128 11

Morphine and hydromorphone infusions of 6 or more (average 25.75) days in duration were used with increasing frequency (up to 7%) by our oncology inpatients. Eighty-six percent of the 135 inpatients we reviewed realized good pain control with dose rates up to 700 morphine-equivalent (ME) mg/h. Local toxicity occurred on only 10 occasions. Systemic side effects secondary to the infusion were reported 75 times and were generally readily reversed. Myoclonus was seen in 11% of our patients at dose rates as low as 60-90 ME mg/h. Adjuvant therapies were not used as frequently as might be warranted. We believe that narcotic infusions, particularly subcutaneous ones, are safe and effective. Further prospective trials are needed to clarify how they should be combined with other therapies to control cancer pain that is poorly responsive to narcotics, and to better understand the etiology and management of serious side effects.
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PMID:Inpatient narcotic infusions for patients with cancer pain. 169 50

Elective cardioversion is a short procedure performed under general anesthesia for the treatment of cardiac dysrhythmias. Selection of the anesthetic agent is important, because a short duration of action and hemodynamic stability are required. Forty-four patients scheduled for elective cardioversion in the coronary care unit were studied prospectively. All patients were randomly assigned, according to the last digit of their clinical record number, to receive one of the four anesthetic agents studied: group 1, 12 patients who received 3 mg/kg of sodium thiopental; group 2, 10 patients who received 0.15 mg/kg of etomidate; group 3, 12 patients who received 1.5 mg/kg of propofol; and group 4, 10 patients who received 0.15 mg/kg of midazolam. All patients also received 1.5 micrograms/kg of fentanyl 3 minutes before induction. All four drugs provided satisfactory anesthesia for cardioversion and there were no major complications. Midazolam produced a more prolonged duration of effect and more interindividual variability. Propofol was associated with hypotension and a higher incidence of apnea, and its duration of action was similar to that of etomidate or thiopental. Etomidate produced myoclonus and pain on injection; however, it was the only agent that did not decrease arterial blood pressure. Thiopental reduced blood pressure but otherwise seemed an appropriate anesthetic for this procedure. In conclusion, all four anesthetic agents were acceptable for cardioversion, although their pharmacological differences suggest specific indications for individual patients.
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PMID:Anesthesia for elective cardioversion: a comparison of four anesthetic agents. 176 20

We report the case of a patient who developed myoclonus and hyperalgesia following administration of high-dose subarachnoid morphine. This complication occurred with 40-80 mg/day continuous infusion. The pathophysiology of these side effects is discussed.
Pain 1991 Dec
PMID:Hyperalgesia and myoclonus with intrathecal infusion of high-dose morphine. 178 4

Substance P-like and somatostatin-like immunoreactivities (SPLI and SLI) were determined in ventricular fluid of patients with chronic pain syndromes and in a comparison group with multiple sclerosis, essential tremor, epilepsy and postanoxic myoclonus. Concentrations of SPLI and SLI were non-significantly decreased by 40% and 33% in chronic pain patients as compared with control patients without pain. There were no differences apparent between subgroups of pain patients (deafferentation pain, neoplasia-induced pain, thalamic pain). High pressure liquid chromatography combined with radioimmunoassay showed marked heterogeneity of SPLI and SLI.
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PMID:Substance P-like immunoreactivity and somatostatin-like immunoreactivity in the ventricular fluid of patients with chronic pain syndromes. 183 80

Muscle pain occurs in various neuromuscular disorders with characteristic physiological or biochemical abnormalities. There is, however, a group of patients in whom there is no clear physiological or structural basis for their pains. This syndrome has been called fibrositis or fibromyalgia. Sleep abnormalities have been reported in some of these patients, but have not been confirmed by others. We studied 8 patients with this disorder and found sleep abnormalities that were characterized by nocturnal myoclonus, alpha-delta sleep, and abnormalities compatible with depression. Polysomnography was, therefore, instrumental in helping direct the treatment of these patients. Therapeutic approaches aimed to correct the specific disorders were effective in improving the pain symptoms.
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PMID:Polysomnography in idiopathic muscle pain syndrome (fibrositis). 184 93

To elucidate the sensitivity to pain stimuli in patients with cortical reflex myoclonus, pain-related somatosensory evoked potentials (pain SEPs) following CO2 laser stimulation and conventional electrically-stimulated SEPs (electric SEPs) were compared in four patients with cortical reflex myoclonus. The P25 peak of electric SEPs was considerably enhanced but the P320 potential of pain SEPs was of normal amplitude in all patients. After medication, myoclonus was reduced and the amplitude of P25 was decreased, but P320 showed no change. In our previous study of the scalp distribution in normal subjects, a subcortical site, probably the thalamus, was considered to be the generator source of P320. Because most pain stimuli do not reach the cortex, patients with cortical reflex myoclonus are not sensitive to pain stimuli and P320 in pain SEPs is not enhanced.
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PMID:Pain-related somatosensory evoked potentials in cortical reflex myoclonus. 210 12


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