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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Segmental epidural analgesia (T10-
T12
) was performed in 418 parturients, using a 4-6 ml dose of 0.5% bupivacaine, with or without adrenaline. Seventy per cent of parturients were primiparas and 30% had histories, or signs, of possible uteroplacental insufficiency. Our aim was to relieve
pain
during the long passive opening phase, so that mothers would be rested and active at the beginning of the second phase, but also to avoid abolishing the bearing-down reflex, the absence of which causes an increased frequency of instrumental delivery. The analgesia during the opening phase was of good quality in 89% of primiparas, and 84% of multiparas. The onset of analgesia was rapid (3-5 min) and the duration was on average 2 1/2 h. The incidence of foetal heart rate changes, during the 30 min after epidural, was 5%. The second phase was less than 30 min in about 90% of cases. About 90% of parturients delivered spontaneously, and the frequency of instrument delivery was only 7.4%. Caesarean section was required in 3.7%. Slight, but rapidly correctable, hypotension occurred in 16.5%, and in two cases the hypotension led to more serious complications. This stresses the importance of the availability and competence of both the anaesthetic and obstetric teams. There were no maternal or neonatal mortalities, and the Apgar scores compared well with the figures for the normal material in our obstetric unit.
...
PMID:Selective lumbar epidural block in labour. A clinical analysis. 87 30
The effects of low-dose segmental epidural analgesia on fetal heart rate (FHR) patterns, uterine activity, and some clinical features were examined in a series of 105 normal parturients. The aim of the analgesic technique was to relieve
pain
during the first stage of labour by blocking the sensory nerve fibres at the spinal level of T 10 to
T12
, with either 0-5 per cent bupivacaine or bupivacaine with adrenaline 1 : 200 000, the dose varying from 10 to 25 mg. Obvious pathological changes (late decelerations, prolonged fetal bradycardia, variable deceleration, or loss of beat to beat variation) in FHR patterns within the first 30 minutes after the beginning of analgesia were noted in 9 per cent of the patients. Addition of adrenaline to the analgesic agent seemed to reduce uterine activity for 60 minutes after the analgesia and this was reflected in a longer interval between the block and delivery. A 25 per cent fall in systolic blood pressure was recorded in 11 per cent of the patients. Nine patients required vacuum extractions. Our results show that the epidural technique employed has distinct advantages over the previous methods, which require larger doses of the analgesic, agent, and is therefore safer for the fetus; the addition of adrenaline to the analgesic agent is contraindicated.
...
PMID:Fetal heart rate patterns and uterine activity after segmental epidural analgesia. 91 2
The effect of acupuncture needling in hindlimb points on the threshold of
pain
arising from the radiant heat applied to the snout of the rabbit has been evaluated both before and after various surgical lesions produced in the spinal cord. Section of the dorsal column alone at the level of
T12
-L1 could not produce any detectable change either of the
pain
threshold or of the effect of acupuncture on the
pain
threshold. Nor could the superficial lateral cordotomy seriously affect the analgesic effect of acupuncture. However, a lesion placed in the ventral two thirds of the lateral funiculus on the contralateral side could abolish almost completely this effect.
...
PMID:Studies on spinal ascending pathway for effect of acupuncture analgesia in rabbits. 106 Dec 76
Pain
typical of that from the diseased reno-ureteral unit can emanate from any adjacent organ or any organ with the same innervation. It may also be the result of, or be exacerbated by, mental illness. Case examples of herniated thoracic disk,
T12
neuralgia and short leg syndrome, costovertebral joint arthritis, metastatic carcinoma, myofascial syndrome and pancreatitis demonstrated the need for an orderly approach to the problem. Currently, patient screening with the Cornell medical index and the urology questionnaire allows direction of the physical examination, special radiographic and laboratory studies and psychiatric evaluations. An orderly evaluation of flank pain will prove rewarding and may prevent unnecessary urologic operations.
...
PMID:Non-urologic flank pain: a diagnostic approach. 112 8
The protrusion of cervical intervertebral discs was divided into three pathological entities by Spurling; soft disc, hard disc and spondylosis. We applied these concept to the dorsal intervertebral disc disease and treated two cases of thoracic spondylosis. Case 1. A 41-year-old male entered the hospital because of the gradual progression of weakness of both legs of two months' duration. Since ten days before admission he had not had an errection and had not been to able to walk and micturate. He also complained of paresthesia radiating down the abdomen into both legs. There were no visceral complaints. Neurological examination revealed severe weakness of both legs with bilateral impairment of deep sensations and hypalgesia up to the level of T6. Reflexes in both legs were hyperactive with sustained clonus. Plantar responses were extensor bilaterally. Though plain X-rays showed no changes, tomography revealed a calcified intervertebral spur formation at the T5-6 interspace. A myelogram showed a complete block of the contrast medium at the level of the upper part of T6. The patient underwent a complete laminectomy from T3 through T6 and extradural anterior decompression with the removal of the calcified disc at the T5-6 interspace using an air drill. Postoperatively, he demonstrated an immediate improvement in sensation and a gradual recovery in motor power. At his follow-up examination 14 months after surgery he could walk without assistance. Case 2. A 47-year-old dwarfish woman (130 cm) with a low back pain and difficulty in walking for a few years duration was admitted. A few months before admission she felt
pain
at her left lateral abdomen. There was weakness of both legs, greater in the left. Reflexes in her left lower extremity were hyperactive with sustained clonus. Plantar responces were flexor bilaterally. Palin X-rays showed scoliosis of thoracic spine with the top at T7 level and calcified intervertebral masses at T10-11, T11-12 and
T12
-L1, extending into the canal that were confirmed more clearly by tomography. Myelography by a cisternal puncture disclosed a complete block at the level of T10. The patient underwent total laminectomy of T9 through L2 and extradural anterior decompression with the removal of calcified discs. At her follow-up examination 12 months after surgery she could walk for herself with some residual neurological signs, minimal weakness in the right leg and hypesthesia up to the level of
T12
in the left. We have discussed the incidental, related diagnostic and operative problems of this disease.
...
PMID:[The protrusion of thoracic intervertebral disc-thoracic spondylosis (author's transl)]. 123 40
From January 1985 through January 1990, 244 patients (168 males, 76 females, mean age: 69 +/- 14 years) received epidural spinal cord stimulation for the treatment of advanced, nonreconstructable, peripheral vascular disease of the lower limbs due to atherosclerosis in 180 patients, atherosclerosis and/or diabetes in 49, and thromboangiitis obliterans in 15 patients: previous surgery included 101 bypass-grafts in 70 patients, 51% of which below the knee, and 117 sympathectomies in 113 patients as the last resource in face of distal peripheral vascular disease of the lower limbs. Mean ankle-to brachial systolic pressure ratio was .31 +/- .34 on symptomatic limbs; due to
pain
and advanced disease, walking capacity was assessed in only 151 patients, either on treadmill in 25, or in a metered corridor in 126; angiogram of the lower limbs was performed in every patient unless one not older than three months was readily available;
pain
at rest was assessed after an analogical scale; partial transcutaneous oxygen tension was measured on the dorsum of the fore-foot of 77 symptomatic limbs (mean: 13.35 +/- 14 mmHg). According to clinical and functional evaluation, 18 patients had exertional ischemia (group I), 87 had permanent ischemia with
pain
at rest and no tissue loss (group II), and 139 had chronic tissue loss (group III), including 93 ischemic ulcers (mean surface: 3.7 cm2, mean duration: 3.5 months) in 88 patients, 27 limited gangrene, and 24 previous limited non-healing distal amputation. After temporary spinal cord stimulation at
T12
-L1 level (mean duration: 9 +/- 4 days) with a percutaneous quadripolar electrode lead had allowed for selection of responders, 212 patients received an implantable neurostimulator.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Electric stimulation of the spinal cord in arterial diseases of the legs. A multicenter study of 244 patients]. 143 7
Thirty-eight patients with unstable thoracolumbar and lumbar (
T12
-L5) spine fractures were treated with Cotrel-Dubousset pedicle screw instrumentation. They were followed for an average of 22.73 months (range 12-39). Measurements of canal compromise, wedge index, and kyphosis correction at follow-up examination were made. Thirty-three (86%) patients responded to a questionnaire concerning overall satisfaction, use of
pain
medication and return to work. There was an overall correction of kyphosis at follow-up of only one degree after a loss of six degrees from operative correction. There were nine cases of bent or broken screws that occurred at the thoracolumbar junction. Only one patient with instrumentation required continued
pain
medication and most had returned to work. Thirty-two of thirty-three patients were satisfied with the overall surgical result and twenty-eight of thirty-three patients had returned to work.
...
PMID:Pedicle screw instrumentation for thoracolumbar burst fractures and fracture-dislocations. 152 19
A German shepherd dog was treated initially for signs of urinary tract infection; subsequently, signs of spinal
pain
and neurologic deficits developed. Fungal hyphae were found in the urine sediment, and spinal radiography revealed changes in the vertebrae and intervertebral disks at the levels of T3 to T8,
T12
to T13, L3-4, and L5-6, consistent with diskospondylitis. Fungal cultures of urine and specimens from spinal lesions yielded Aspergillus terreus. Itraconazole (5 mg/kg of body weight, PO, q 24 h) was used to treat this infection, and locomotion improved. Sudden death occurred 4 weeks after treatment was initiated; this was attributed to exsanguination associated with a weakened renal artery. This dog was raised in Florida and resided in central Virginia. The disseminated aspergillosis found in this dog was not limited to the hot arid climates that some reports suggest are optimal conditions for growth.
...
PMID:Disseminated aspergillosis in a dog with diskospondylitis and neurologic deficits. 155 89
In 7 awake patients with neuropathic lower extremity
pain
, spinal somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) were elicited from the non-painful leg by electrical stimulation of the peroneal nerve and mechanical stimulation of the hallux ball. Recording was made epidurally in the thoraco-lumbar region by means of an electrode temporarily inserted for trial of
pain
-suppressing stimulation. In response to peroneal nerve stimulation, two major SEP complexes were found. The first complex consisted, as has been described earlier, of an initial positivity (P12), a spike-like negativity (N14), a slow negativity (N16) and a slow positivity (P23). The second complex consisted of a slow biphasic wave, conceivably mediated by a supraspinal loop. Both complexes had a similar longitudinal distribution with amplitude maxima at the
T12
vertebral body. The SEP evoked by mechanical hallux ball stimulation had a relatively small amplitude, and there was no significant second complex. The relationship between stimulus intensity and SEP amplitude was negatively accelerating. The longitudinal distribution of spinal SEP was compared with the somatotopic distribution of paresthesiae induced by stimulation through the epidural electrode. It was found that stimulation applied at the level of maximal SEP generally induced paresthesiae in the corresponding peripheral region. Therefore, spinal SEP may be used as a guide for optimal positioning of a spinal electrode for therapeutic stimulation when implanted under general anesthesia. An attempt was made to record the antidromic potential in the peroneal nerve elicited from the dorsal columns by epidural stimulation. The antidromic response was, however, very sensitive to minimal changes of stimulus strength and body position of the patient, and was also contaminated by simultaneously evoked muscular reflex potentials. Thus, peripheral responses evoked by epidural stimulation appeared too unreliable to be useful for the permanent implantation of a spinal electrode for therapeutic stimulation.
...
PMID:Distribution of lumbar spinal evoked potentials and their correlation with stimulation-induced paresthesiae. 170 4
The sensory innervation of the postpharyngeal foregut was investigated by injecting the enzyme horseradish peroxidase (HRP) into the walls of the esophagus, stomach, or duodenum. The transported HRP was identified histochemically, labeled neurons in the spinal and vagal ganglia were counted, and the results were plotted using an SAS statistical program. The spinal sensory fields of each viscus were defined using three determinations: craniocaudal extent, principal innervation field, and peak innervation field. The data revealed that innervation fields are craniocaudally extensive, the sensory field of each viscus overlaps significantly with its neighbor, yet each viscus can be characterized by a field of peak innervation density. Craniocaudal innervation of the esophagus spans as many as 22-23 paired spinal ganglia (C1-L2). There are two peak innervation fields for the cervical (C2-C6 and T2-T4) and for the thoracic (T2-T4 and T8-
T12
) sectors of the esophagus. The sensory innervation of the stomach extends craniocaudally over as many as 25 paired spinal ganglia (C2-L5). The peak innervation field of the stomach spans a large area comprising the cranial, middle, and the immediately adjoining caudal thoracic ganglia (T2-T10). The duodenum is innervated craniocaudally by as many as 15 paired thoracolumbar ganglia (T2-L3). Peak innervation originates in the middle and caudal thoracic ganglia and cranial lumbar (T6-L1) ganglia. There is a recognizable viscerotopic organization in the sensory innervation of the postpharyngeal foregut; successively more caudal sectors of this region of the alimentary canal are supplied with sensory fibers from successively more caudal spinal dorsal root ganglia. Vagal afferent innervation of the esophagus, stomach, and duodenum is bilateral and originates predominantly, but not exclusively, from vast numbers of neurons in the nodose (distal) ganglia. The esophagus is innervated bilaterally and more abundantly by jugular (proximal) ganglia neurons than is either the stomach or duodenum. The physiological significance of the findings are discussed in relation to the phenomena of visceral
pain
and referred
pain
.
...
PMID:Sensory innervation of the canine esophagus, stomach, and duodenum. 175 92
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