Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030193 (pain)
261,466 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 70-year-old man developed pain and functional weakness in the lower limbs with dysesthesia and urinary retention after subarachnoid anesthesia with 0.5% hyperbaric bupivacaine. Neurological and electrophysiological tests and follow-up, as well as diagnostic images (CAT and MR), ruled out spinal cord lesions. The diagnosis was cauda equina syndrome. Cauda equina syndrome is a neurological complication of subarachnoid anesthesia. Associated with use of microcatheters for continuous subarachnoid anesthesia and 5% hyperbaric lidocaine, cauda equina syndrome is rare after a single injection of bupivacaine. Although the pathogenesis of cauda equina syndrome is poorly understood, there is agreement on the neurotoxicity of local anesthetics, particularly of 5% hyperbaric lidocaine.
...
PMID:[Cauda equina syndrome after intradural anesthesia with bupivacaine]. 1159 Dec 82

Steroids, drugs with potent antiinflammatory properties on the damaged nervous roots, have been especially used as adjuvants of local anesthetics, by spinal route, in the treatments of low-back pain. Spinal route was chosen to obtain a higher local concentration of drug, with few systemic side effects and to improve drug's action mechanism. Steroids seem to interact with GABA receptors and thus control neural excitability through a stabilising effect on membranes, modification of nervous conduction and membrane hyperpolarization, in supraspinal and spinal site. Epidural steroids are especially used in the treatment of low back pain due to irritation of nervous roots. They have been administered alone or in association with local anesthetics and/or saline solution. Slow release formulations have been generally used (methylprednisolone acetate, and triamcinolone diacetate). Other indications of epidural steroids are: postoperative hemilaminectomy pain, prevention of post herpetic neuralgia, degenerative ostheoartrithis. Intra-thecal steroids have been frequently used in the treatment of lumbar radiculopathy due to discopathy, as an alternative treatment when epidural administration is ineffective. Positive results have been obtained with methylprednisolone acetate, alone or in association with local anesthetics. Complications related to intraspinal steroids injections are due to execution of the block and side effects of drugs. Complications associated with intrathecal steroids are more frequent and severe than epidural injections and include: adhesive arachnoiditis, aseptic meningitis, cauda equina syndrome. Steroidal toxicity seems to be related to the polyethylenic glycole vehicle. Anyway, slow release formulations contain less concentrated polyethylenic glycole. The epidural administration, a correct dilution of steroid with local anesthetics solution and/or saline solution, and a limited number of injections (no more than three) allows a significant reduction of steroid neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:[Clinical use of spinal or epidural steroids]. 1224 93

Diastematomyelia is a rare entity in which some portion of the spinal cord is split into two by a midline septum. Most cases occur in childhood, but some develop in adulthood. A variety of concurrent spinal anomalies may be found in patients with diastematomyelia. The authors describe a 38-year-old right-handed woman who presented with a 7-month history of lower-extremity pain and weakness on the right side. She denied recent trauma or illness. Sensorimotor deficits, hyperreflexia, and a positive Babinski reflex in the right lower extremity were demonstrated on examination. Neuroimaging revealed diastematomyelia extending from T-1 to T-3, an expanded right hemicord from T-2 to T-4, and a C6-7 syrinx. The patient underwent T1-3 total laminectomies, resection of the septum, untethering of the cord, and excision of the hemicord lesion. The hemicord mass was determined to be an intramedullary epidermoid cyst; on microscopic evaluation the diastematomyelia cleft was shown to contain fibroadipose connective tissue with nerve twigs and ganglion cells. Postoperatively, the right lower-extremity pain, weakness, and sensory deficits improved. Diastematomyelia can present after a long, relatively asymptomatic period and should be kept in the differential diagnosis for radiculopathy, myelopathy, tethered cord syndrome, or cauda equina syndrome. Numerous spinal lesions can be found in conjunction with diastematomyelia. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first case in which a thoracic epidermoid cyst and cervical syrinx occurred concurrently with an upper thoracic diastematomyelia. Thorough neuraxis radiographic evaluation and surgical treatment are usually indicated.
...
PMID:Thoracic diastematomyelia with concurrent intradural epidermoid spinal cord tumor and cervical syrinx in an adult. Case report. 1229 85

A 6.5-year-old German Shepherd Dog underwent decompressive surgery for cauda equina syndrome. On the basis of intraoperative findings, the dorsal laminectomy was extended from L6 to S2. Partial dorsal annulectomies were also performed on the L6-7 and L7-S1 intervertebral disks. Two weeks following discharge, the dog had an acute onset of signs of pain and worsening of the neurologic status. Radiography and surgical exploration revealed bilateral fractures of the vertebral pedicles and caudal articular facets of L7. Vertebral stabilization was achieved with intramedullary pins and methylmethacrylate. The dog fully recovered. Although the destabilizing effect of various procedures on the vertebral column has been documented in vitro, vertebral fractures associated with instability have not been reported. Our description of a vertebral fracture following a cauda equina decompressive procedure in a dog emphasizes the need for caution when performing multi-level dorsal laminectomy and diskectomy.
...
PMID:Fracture of L7 vertebral articular facets and pedicles following dorsal laminectomy in a dog. 1232 18

The development of the cauda equina syndrome in the dog and the involvement of spinal nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity (NOS-IR) and catalytic nitric oxide synthase (cNOS) activity were studied in a pain model caused by multiple cauda equina constrictions. Increased NOS-IR was found two days post-constriction in neurons of the deep dorsal horn and in large, mostly bipolar neurons located in the internal basal nucleus of Cajal seen along the medial border of the dorsal horn. Concomitantly, NOS-IR was detected in small neurons close to the medioventral border of the ventral horn. High NOS-IR appeared in a dense sacral vascular body close to the Lissauer tract in S1-S3 segments. Somatic and fiber-like NOS-IR appeared at five days post-constriction in the Lissauer tract and in the lateral and medial collateral pathways arising from the Lissauer tract. Both pathways were accompanied by a dense punctate NOS immunopositive staining. Simultaneously, the internal basal nucleus of Cajal and neuropil of this nucleus exhibited high NOS-IR. A significant decrease in the number of small NOS immunoreactive somata was noted in laminae I-II of L6-S2 segments at five days post-constriction while, at the same time, the number of NOS immunoreactive neurons located in laminae VIII and IX was significantly increased. Moreover, high immunopositivity in the sacral vascular body persisted along with a highly expressed NOS-IR staining of vessels supplying the dorsal sacral gray commissure and dorsal horn in S1-S3 segments. cNOS activity, based on a radioassay of compartmentalized gray and white matter regions of lower lumbar segments and non-compartmentalized gray and white matter of S1-S3 segments, proved to be highly variable for both post-constriction periods.
...
PMID:Cauda equina syndrome and nitric oxide synthase immunoreactivity in the spinal cord of the dog. 1289 62

Local anaesthetics have been placed in the intrathecal space for approximately 100 years. Currently used intrathecal local anaesthetics appear to be relatively benign on the basis of the low incidence of permanent neurological deficits. In large retrospective surveys of 4000-10 000 patients, the incidence of persistent neurological sequelae after subarachnoid anaesthesia varies between 0.01 and 0.7%. Since its introduction in 1948, hyperbaric 5% lidocaine has been used for millions of spinal anaesthetics. The predictable onset and limited duration of action have made lidocaine one of the most popular spinal anaesthetics currently available. Concern about the use of spinal lidocaine began in 1991 with published reports of cauda equina syndrome after continuous spinal anaesthesia. In 1993, Schneider published a case report of four patients undergoing spinal anaesthesia who postoperatively experienced aching and pain in the buttocks and lower extremities. This chapter reviews the neurotoxicity of spinal local anaesthetics, as well as the incidence, possible aetiology, and treatment of transient neurological symptoms after lidocaine spinal anaesthesia.
...
PMID:Neurotoxicity of intrathecal local anaesthetics and transient neurological symptoms. 1452 15

Extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase (ERK) is a mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) that mediates several cellular responses to mitogenic and differentiation signals, and activation of ERK in dorsal horn neurons by noxious stimulation is known to contribute to pain hypersensitivity. In order to elucidate the pathophysiological mechanisms of the cauda equina syndrome, secondary to spinal canal stenosis, we evaluated walking dysfunction triggered by forced exercise and activation of ERK in the dorsal horn using a rat model of neuropathic intermittent claudication. Rats in the lumbar canal stenosis (LCS) group showed a shorter running distance from 1 to 14 days after surgery. Two minutes after running on the treadmill apparatus, phosphorylation of ERK was induced in neurons in the superficial laminae in the LCS group but not in the sham group, whereas there was no change in the deeper laminae. Intrathecal administration of the MAPK kinase inhibitor, U0126, 30 min before running, clearly increased the running distance, whereas there was no significant change in the vehicle control group 3 days after surgery. In addition, a prostaglandin E1 analog, OP-1206 alpha-CD, administered orally, improved the walking dysfunction, and further, inhibited activation of ERK following running 7 days after surgery. These findings suggest that intermittent claudication triggered by forced walking might affect the phosphorylation of ERK in the superficial laminae, possibly via transient (partial) ischemia of the spinal cord. ERK activation in the dorsal horn neurons may be involved in the transient pain in the neuropathic intermittent claudication model.
Pain 2004 May
PMID:Activation of extracellular signal-regulated protein kinase in dorsal horn neurons in the rat neuropathic intermittent claudication model. 1508 27

We describe a case of cauda equina syndrome caused by synovial cysts and the lithotomy position. A transurethral resection of the prostate was performed under spinal anesthesia in the lithotomy position. We believe that this is the first case report of facet joint synovial cysts and the lithotomy position causing ischemic neurologic injury to the cauda equina. Other etiologies such as needle trauma, neurotoxicity, hematoma, and abscess were not evident. We believe that positioning the patient in the lithotomy position narrowed the cross-sectional area of the spinal canal in a patient with a coexisting critically stenosed lumbar spinal canal. The resultant mechanical pressure caused an ischemic compression injury to the cauda equina.
Reg Anesth Pain Med
PMID:Synovial cysts and the lithotomy position causing cauda equina syndrome. 1513 9

Symptomatic congenital intraspinal cysts are uncommon but not rare. Since these cysts may have various manifestations, a careful differential diagnosis is needed. We retrospectively reviewed findings in 3 women and 2 men (age range, 10-50 years) with 6 symptomatic cysts of the thoracic or thoracolumbar spine. In addition, we statistically analyzed the patients' Nurick myelopathy grades before and after treatment. Pain and spastic paraparesis were the most frequent manifestations. Radiographs showed the widening of the spinal bony canal in 3 patients with extradural arachnoid cysts. All patients received limited laminectomy and appropriate surgical procedures. Pathology reports indicated neurenteric (n = 1), arachnoid (n = 4), and epidermoid (n = 1) cysts. Their functional status significantly improved by a mean of 2.6 Nurick points (p = 0.0002). Our findings confirm that these cysts have various manifestations. Congenital intraspinal cyst should be included in the differential diagnosis for patients with back pain, radiculopathy, cauda equina syndrome, Brown-Sequard syndrome, or myelopathy. The advent of MR imaging and increased knowledge about the pathogenesis of these cysts have improved the ease and accuracy of their early diagnosis; in addition, postoperative prognoses are excellent if surgery is performed early.
...
PMID:Surgical experience in symptomatic congenital intraspinal cysts. 1560 89

The symptoms associated with lumbar spinal stenosis can decrease quality of life and may cause patients to seek treatment. Except in rare cases of rapid neurologic progression or cauda equina syndrome, nonsurgical modalities should be the initial treatment choice. Activity modification, a variety of medications, epidural steroid injections, and other methods are recommended for pain reduction. A formal physical therapy program, which focuses on flexion-based exercises, may lead to improved patientfunction. Surgery is indicated in patients who remain symptomatic despite a course of nonsurgical therapy and who have advanced imaging studies that correspond to existing .symptoms. Adequate decompression of the neural elements and maintenance of bony stability are necessary for a good surgical outcome for patients with spinal stenosis. Laminectomy has long been the method of choice for thorough lumbar decompression. Preserving at least the lateral half of the facet joints bilaterally and bone in the area of the pars interarticularis minimizes the potential for iatrogenic instability. Numerous other decompression techniques have been described, including multilevel laminotomies, fenestration, distraction laminoplasty, and microscopic decompression. Arthrodesis, either with or without instrumentation, is also indicated in some patients. Several studies report that surgical treatment produces better outcomes than nonsurgical treatment in the short term; however, the results tend to deteriorate with time. Lumbar decompressive surgery can be complicated by epidural hematoma, deep venous thrombosis, dural tear, infection, nerve root injury, and recurrence of symptoms.
...
PMID:Nonsurgical and surgical management of lumbar spinal stenosis. 1594 58


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>