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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (nausea)
23,468 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Systematic treatment in children suffering from cancer pain is a field of pediatric oncology that was neglected for a long time. Investigations have shown that pain therapy oriented to the special situation of the child's body is urgently necessary. In Germany, an unpublished study by Fengler (Berlin), who reviewed all pediatric cancer centers, revealed serious deficiencies in the therapy of pain in children. In our study, we attempted to develop a new concept of cancer pain management, with the emphasis on cooperation between pediatric oncologist and anesthesiological pain therapists. PATIENTS AND METHODS. A total of 36 children and adolescents suffering from malignant tumors and in whom pain therapy according to WHO stage III was necessary were treated. After being seen by a pediatric oncologist and an anesthetist (pain therapist) each patient received either slow release oral morphine (MST, 0.5-1 mg/kg per dose) two to three times a day or a continuous infusion of morphine (0.05 mg/kg per h). The amount of morphine administered was quickly raised until the young patients were free of pain. Drug actions (pain score) and side effects were registered continuously with a documentation form. The morphine was combined with dipyrone 5-15 mg/kg per dose five times a day. The intravenous dosage of oral dipyrone was 2-5 mg/kg per h. RESULTS. The average age of the patients treated was 12 years (1.5-19 years); 10 were inpatients, and 26 were outpatients. All patients were treated successfully. The doses of morphine required for pain relief varied substantially (1-25 mg/kg per day p.o. and 0.05 mg-1 mg/kg per h i.v.). We did not observe extreme sedation or respiratory depression. In our patients we did not observe opioid-induced nausea such as is frequently seen in adults. All children needed laxatives. In 2 children, intolerable itching was experienced after oral administration of slow-release morphine. In 20 patients cortisone was given as adjuvant therapy, in 5 patients with neuropathic pain, anticonvulsants e.g., carbamazepine. In 6 patients we administered benzodiazepines successfully for sedation and anxiolysis. CONCLUSIONS. Therapy of pain in children with advanced cancer requires interdisciplinary cooperation. In most children therapy of pain can be successfully administered with slow-release morphine in combination with dipyrone, so that the children can remain in their usual social environment.
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PMID:[Cancer pain therapy in children and adolescents using morphine]. 204 10

Forty cancer patients were randomly assigned to two groups (n = 20). All had incapacitating pain unresponsive to the usual non opioid analgesic drugs. An epidural catheter was set up at the level of the most painful metamere, and made to pass subcutaneously so as to exit either in the supraclacicular fossa, or on the patient's flank. At T0, the patients were given 4 mg morphine hydrochloride diluted in 10 ml normal saline. Thirty min later, patients in the naloxone group (group N) were given a 0.4 mg bolus, followed by a constant rate infusion of 5 micrograms.kg-1.h-1, of naloxone hydrochloride during 18 h. Patients in group P (placebo) were given normal saline instead. The degree of pain was studied with a visual analogue scale and analgesia was assessed by a clinician on a five point scale. These two parameters were obtained half an hour after the injection of morphine and 2, 4, 6 and 24 hours later. At the same time, the patients were questioned about adverse side-effects: nausea, vomiting, pruritus, dysuria, urinary retention. Respiratory depression was assessed clinically and biologically (blood gas measurements at the afore mentioned times). Heart rate, systolic and diastolic blood pressure were also measured. There was no statistically significant difference between the groups in quality and duration of analgesia. Pain reached its lowest level 4 h after the injection of morphine, returning to half its original value at the 24th h. This was also true for the incidence of nausea (11 in group N, 5 in group P), vomiting (3 in both groups), and urinary retention (6 in group P, 5 in group N).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Prevention by naloxone of adverse effects of epidural morphine analgesia for cancer pain]. 205 46

A prospective study of 94 patients undergoing elective lower segment caesarean section under epidural anaesthesia was performed in order to determine the incidence of shivering and the influence of epidural pethidine. Epidural anaesthesia was established with bupivacaine 0.5% with adrenaline, with or without additional lignocaine 2% with adrenaline, to total 20-25 ml. With the injection of epidural local anaesthesia an extra 5 ml of solution was administered into the epidural space--pethidine 25 mg preservative-free, in normal saline, or normal saline alone. Patient, administering anaesthetist and observer were blinded to the nature of the test substance. Shivering was assessed by an independent observer and subsequently rated by the patient. Other side-effects also recorded were nausea, vomiting, pruritus and drowsiness. The incidence of shivering was 36% in the control (saline) group and 11% in the pethidine group. The difference was highly significant (P less than 0.01). There was no significant difference in the incidence of maternal nausea, vomiting, drowsiness or pruritus, or neonatal Apgar scores. Cord blood samples were assayed for pethidine, revealing low or absent pethidine concentrations.
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PMID:The influence of epidural pethidine on shivering during lower segment caesarean section under epidural anaesthesia. 206 45

Twenty-two patients of ASA physical status 1 or 2 undergoing surgery of the perineal region received intrathecal pethidine as the sole agent. The anesthetic effect of 0.5 mg.kg-1 (group 1) or 0.7 mg.kg-1 (group 2) of pethidine was evaluated and compared. Patients were randomly assigned to one of the two groups (12 in group 1 and 10 in group 2). Subarachnoid puncture was performed with the patient in the sitting position, using a 25 gauge spinal needle at the lumbar vertebral level of L4/5 or L5/S. The patients remained sitting for 5 min before being placed in the supine position. Two patients in the group 1 had inadequate sensory blockade and they were excluded from further study. The average segmental level of analgesia was S1 in group 1 and L2 in group 2. Motor blockade of the anal sphincter was seen in all patients. During the operation, the patients were stable hemodynamically and no respiratory depression was noticed. Prolonged postoperative analgesia was obtained and some patients did not require additional analgesics during postoperative period. Four patients complained of itching, two patients of nausea and two developed arrhythmias.
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PMID:[Spinal anesthesia with pethidine as the sole agent]. 207 94

An epidemiological survey on 30,000VDT operators has been carried out to evaluate the relationship between asthenopia and monitor characteristics. A VDU operator has been classified as asthenopeic if he complained about at least two of the following ten symptoms: headache, tearing, eye smarting, blurred vision, double vision, ocular itching, photophobia, blinking, nausea, eye heaviness. Visual discomfort has been related to 1) the presence of flicker; the possibility to regulate, 2) brightness, 3) height; and 4) inclination of monitor. Asthenopia has resulted statistically correlated to the presence of flicker and to the impossibility of regulating height and inclination of monitor for both sexes. The possibility to regulate monitor brightness has not determined a reduction of visual discomfort either in men or in women.
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PMID:[Asthenopia and monitor characteristics]. 208 58

More than 135 different strategies for medical treatment have been described for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal syndromes. The substances used most frequently (benzodiazepines, barbiturates, or clomethiazol) themselves pose some risk for abuse or addiction. Anticonvulsants, especially carbamazepine (CBZ), have been discussed for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal since the early seventies. Various studies report favourable results with CBZ, usually combined with sedative agents. Nineteen out-patients and 19 in-patients took part in an open study of CBZ in alcohol withdrawal. The dose of CBZ was adjusted individually and ranged from a mean dose of 761 mg on day 1 to 616 mg on day 3 and to 388 mg on day 7 in the group of out-patients, and from 789 mg on day 1, 694 mg on day 3 to 562 mg on day 7 in the sample of in-patients. The "Objective Clinical Scale in Assessment and Measurement of Alcohol Withdrawal" (OCSAMAW) was used for treatment evaluation. Statistical analysis showed a significant improvement on the 5%-level in both groups; four in-patients needed concomitant treatment with oxazepam. Nausea and pruritus were the most common side-effects of CBZ treatment.
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PMID:Carbamazepine monotherapy in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. 208 98

The analgesic and adverse effects of intrathecal methadone 5 mg, 10 mg and 20 mg were assessed and compared with intrathecal morphine 0.5 mg. The study was conducted on 38 patients who underwent total knee or hip replacement surgery. The intrathecal opioid was administered at the end of surgery and assessments began 1 h thereafter and continued for 24 h. Pain measurements, supplementary analgesia requirements, and adverse effects were recorded. Intrathecal morphine 0.5 mg provided effective and prolonged analgesia. Intrathecal methadone 5 mg, 10 mg, and 20 mg produced good analgesia of 4 h duration. Thereafter the median pain scores with intrathecal methadone were consistently higher (worse) than those with intrathecal morphine (P less than 0.05). The time to the onset of discomfort severe enough to require supplemental morphine was longer after intrathecal morphine than following methadone (15 h with morphine 0.5 mg; 6.25 h, 6.5 h and 6 h with methadone 5 mg, 10 mg, and 20 mg respectively: P less than 0.05). Central nervous system depression manifesting as respiratory depression, hypotension, and excessive drowsiness occurred in 3 of 8 patients injected with methadone 20 mg intrathecally. Generalized pruritus, nausea, vomiting, and urinary retention were common and equally distributed among the treatment groups. We conclude that both intrathecal morphine 0.5 mg and methadone 5, 10, and 20 mg provide excellent analgesia but that morphine has a more prolonged effect. Methadone 20 mg produced unacceptable side effects. Clinical evidence for rostral spread of methadone within the CSF, as indicated by facial itching and excessive drowsiness, was less apparent with 5 mg than with 10 and 20 mg. Various explanations for the observed differences between the drugs are discussed.
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PMID:Intrathecal methadone: a dose-response study and comparison with intrathecal morphine 0.5 mg. 208 26

Cases are reported of two patients in whom acute hepatitis and cholestatic jaundice were induced by a tricyclic antidepressant, amineptine. A 29-year old woman received amineptine for 10 days before the onset of acute hepatitis. Slight jaundice and pruritus were preceded by fever, nausea and anorexia. The case is documented by a rapid return to normality of the liver function tests after amineptine was discontinued. We also report the case of a 55-year old woman to whom amineptine was administered for 4 weeks: she was admitted to our Department due to a 14-day history of pruritus and painless jaundice. Histological examination, in this case showed marked cholestasis without inflammatory infiltration. After suspending the treatment, it took 3 weeks for the liver function tests to return to normal. These observations, and the features of the cases published in the literature, suggest that amineptine can produce a wide spectrum of liver injuries, in different patients, taking the form of hepatocellular necrosis, cholestasis or a combination of both.
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PMID:Hepatic injury associated with amineptine therapy. 213 27

In a double blind trial the additional analgesic effect of the combination of epidural lignocaine 2% + epinephrine 1/200,000 with varying epidural Sufentanil doses was studied per- and postoperatively in patients undergoing arthroscopy of the knee. Fifty patients were randomly divided into five groups. They received epidural lignocaine 2% + epinephrine 1/200,000 in addition with respectively 0, 20, 30, 40 or 50 micrograms Sufentanil. There was no additional surgical analgesia when Sufentanil was added. On the other hand, at 40 and 50 micrograms of Sufentanil significantly more patients demonstrated respiratory depression and pronounced sedation during surgery as compared to lignocaine alone. Patients in these groups had better postoperative analgesia. In addition nausea, vomiting and pruritus were seen in some patients at all doses of Sufentanil.
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PMID:Surgical analgesia for knee arthroscopy with epidural lignocaine and sufentanil--effect of varying sufentanil doses. 215 Jul 38

Epidural morphine is effective in the treatment of postoperative pain, but the incidence of associated side effects is high. To assess a potential reduction of opioid side effects by droperidol, 4 mg morphine with either placebo or 2.5 mg droperidol was injected epidurally in a double-blind, randomized, postoperative trial. Forty patients undergoing hip replacement surgery were studied. The overall incidence of side effects during the first 24 h in the group receiving droperidol and morphine was less than 50% of that in the group receiving placebo and morphine (P less than 0.008). Pruritus, emesis, nausea, urinary retention, and hypotension were diminished in the group with droperidol. No significant differences in duration or quality of analgesia were seen. Epidural injection of droperidol did not result in any local or systemic side effects.
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PMID:Epidural droperidol and morphine for postoperative pain. 199 79


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