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Query: UMLS:C0030193 (
pain
)
261,466
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This study compared the analgesic efficacy of intermittent injections of intrathecal fentanyl (10 micrograms), meperidine (10 mg), or sufentanil (5 micrograms) administered to 65 parturients during the first stage of labor. The groups did not differ in onset or duration of effective analgesia. The meperidine group, however, had significantly lower
pain
scores once cervical dilation progressed beyond 6 cm. Side effects included mild pruritus and nausea. After intrathecal drug injection, variable decelerations of the fetal heart rate increased in the fentanyl and meperidine groups. All neonates had a 5-min Apgar score of 7 or more. We conclude that intermittent intrathecal injections of fentanyl, meperidine, or sufentanil can provide adequate first-stage labor analgesia.
Meperidine
appears to provide more reliable analgesia as the first stage of labor progresses.
...
PMID:Comparison among intrathecal fentanyl, meperidine, and sufentanil for labor analgesia. 141 27
The need for
pain
relief during uncomplicated labour and delivery was studied in 125 women attending an Alternative Birth Center (ABC) and 170 women attending an obstetrical ward. The ABC was staffed only with midwives and assistant nurses who took care of all deliveries. In case of complications the doctor on duty at the obstetrical ward could come in a few minutes and the patient was transferred to the obstetrical ward. At the ABC the delivery room was next to the sleeping rooms and the living room and the woman in labour could have a chat with the women, who had given birth. At the obstetrical ward this was not possible. The delivery rooms were on one floor, and after giving birth the woman was moved to another floor. Women at the ABC were older and had a higher social status than women at the obstetrical ward. Twenty four of the 170 women had initially planned to give birth at the ABC but gave birth at the obstetrical ward due to accommodation restrictions at the ABC. Women refused by the ABC resembled women giving birth at the ABC but their need for
pain
relief was identical with the other women giving birth at the obstetrical ward.
Pain
relief with pethidine was 4 times more frequent among women giving birth at the obstetrical ward (18%) than at the ABC (4.8%).
Pethidine
was predominantly administered to young women and primiparas at the obstetrical ward and to women with prolonged labour at both birthplaces.
Pain
1992 Feb
PMID:The need for pain relief in uncomplicated deliveries in an alternative birth center compared to an obstetric delivery ward. 158 36
Meperidine
is an opioid agonist with known weak local anesthetic properties. To determine the efficacy of subarachnoid meperidine as a labor and delivery analgesic, 20 term parturients were given 10 mg meperidine via continuous spinal catheter. Visual analog
pain
scores on a ten-point scale and patient satisfaction scores on a four-point scale were measured before and after establishment of the block and one hour after maximum block was achieved. Time to
pain
relief and return of
pain
was recorded. Additional doses of 7 mg meperidine were given subarachnoid via the catheter when patients requested additional analgesia. Follow-up assessment 24 hours postpartum was used to determine overall patient satisfaction. Visual analog
pain
scale scores (mean +/- SD) were 8.57 +/- 1.43 before block, 0.62 +/- 0.89 immediately after block, and 0.33 +/- 0.57 at one hour after block (p less than 0.0001). Patient satisfaction scale scores (mean +/- SD) were 0.83 +/- 0.88 before block, 3.90 +/- 0.37 immediately after block, and 3.85 +/- 0.31 at one hour after block (p less than 0.0001). At follow-up, 14 of 18 patients rated satisfaction as excellent, with the remaining 4 rating it as good. Expulsive efforts were excellent in 14, good in 3, and fair in 1; 2 patients had cesarean sections. Mean time to onset of
pain
relief was 3.9 minutes (range, 2-12), with analgesia lasting a mean of 83 minutes (range, 38-180). Two patients developed slight motor block. Side effects appeared insidiously and are similar to those observed with other neuraxial opioids.
...
PMID:Efficacy of subarachnoid meperidine for labor analgesia. 177 12
Two hundred and sixty two patients with gallbladder stones were prospectively evaluated at the Biliary Lithiasis Treatment Unit of the Mater Dei Hospital, Belo Horizonte, MG., and 45 (17.5%) were selected for extracorporal shock wave lithotripsy (ECSWL). From these, 32 were submitted to the procedure. One stone was present in 30 patients, 2 stones in another and 1 patient had 3 stones. The mean diameter was 14.7 mm ranging from 8 to 28 mm. ECSWL was preceded by 1 week course of ursodeoxycholic acid (8 to 10 mg/dk/day) and this medication was continued after the procedure. ECSWL was done with the Lithosthar-Plus apparatus (Siemens).
Meperidine
(up to 100 mg) IM and pirazolene IV was given when necessary. The intensity of the shock waves was gradually increased to a maximum (9 bar) whenever tolerated. The treatment was well succeeded in 22 cases (71%) with pulverization in 12 (38.7%). In 9 patients (29%) remaining fragments were greater than 4 mm. From these, 3 were submitted to a second session of ECSWL. In 1 patient the stone could not be properly positioned for lithotripsy. The mean number of shock waves was 2,591, ranging from 801 to 4,411. The mean duration of the sessions was 80 min, ranging from 45 to 150 min. In 3 patients, a complete disappearance of fragments was observed in intervals of 1 to 6 months after the procedure. One patient had severe
pain
during ECSWL and developed acute cholecystitis. One patient had sinus bradycardia. One patient with total stone pulverization, become jaundiced 1 month after ECSWL and a gallbladder carcinoma was found at surgery.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Lithotripsy of gallbladder calculi with extracorporeal shockwaves]. 184 44
Nursing management of second trimester abortion by PGE2 suppository after cervical dilatation with laminaria or Lamicel focuses on monitoring and treating side effects, managing
pain
, and supporting the patient emotionally. Mean abortion time by this method is 15-17 hours, within 24 hours in 80% of women. The side effects expected from PGs are nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, and diarrhea. Premedication with transdermal scopolamine, and ancillary methods such as giving ice chips, airing the room, keeping the patient clean are helpful. Acetaminophen is given orally or rectally for fever, headache, or chills. A beta-adrenergic tocolytic drug such as ritodrine HC1 is given if uterine contractions become tetanic, contractions 2-3 per minute or lasting longer than 6-90 seconds, detected by palpation. This drug must be used with caution in patients with asthma.
Pain
management in midtrimester abortion depends solely on the woman's comfort.
Meperidine
, morphine, epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine, lidocaine or morphine SO4, or patient-controlled anesthesia may be used. The nurse should monitor side effects such as hypotension, allergic responses, arrhythmias, and inability to void. Midtrimester abortion is often a stress-filled experience, since women may be ambivalent upon learning of fetal abnormalities. The women should be monitored after delivery to ensure that her uterus remains contracted, and assisted if surgical removal of retained products is necessary. Patients teaching for discharge, including medication to prevent lactation, is described. A care plan is suggested for assisting the family with bereavement, based on that used in case of stillbirth or neonatal deaths.
...
PMID:Second-trimester termination of pregnancy: nursing care. 156 89
The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of morphine and pethidine on human sphincter of Oddi motility. The action of these opioids on the sphincter of Oddi was evaluated by means of intraoperative manometry in 36 patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy. Both opioids were given in intravenous cumulative equipotent doses up to a maximum of 10 micrograms/kg morphine or 100 micrograms/kg pethidine. At these doses, morphine increased the mean(s.d.) frequency of contractions from 2.4(1.0) to 7.9(1.6) (P less than 0.001); this effect was reduced by naloxone (0.04 mg bolus, P less than 0.05).
Pethidine
inhibited the frequency of contractions from 1.5(0.8) to 0.8(0.5) (P less than 0.05); this response was blocked by atropine (0.6 mg bolus, P less than 0.01). Pretreatment with atropine or naloxone reduced the frequency of contractions significantly (P less than 0.05). The results illustrate different responses to pethidine and morphine of the sphincter of Oddi, and provide a pharmacological explanation for the suitability of pethidine over morphine as the analgesic of choice in patients experiencing biliary
pain
.
...
PMID:Differing effects of pethidine and morphine on human sphincter of Oddi motility. 220 91
Because hydroxyzine hydrochloride is frequently used to tranquilize patients, who are receiving narcotic analgesics for
pain
relief, its effect alone and in combination with meperidine on arterial blood gases and ventilation in patients at rest was evaluated in 65 healthy volunteers, who gave informed consent. Hydroxyzine hydrochloride, 1.5 mg/kg IV given over 30 seconds, caused no decrease but rather a significant (P less than .001) increase in PaO2 and no increase in PaCO2 and/or pH at 5, 10, 20, 30, and 60 minutes (N = 29; mean age = 47.0 years).
Meperidine
, 1.5 mg/kg IV given over 30 seconds, caused a significant (P less than .01) reduction in PaO2 at 5 minutes indicating ventilatory depression but no increase in PaCO2 and/or pH (N = 19; mean age = 32.4 years). The combination of the same doses of hydroxyzine with meperidine IV caused a significantly greater decrease in PaO2 only at 10 minutes but a greater increase in PaCO2 and pH at all times for 60 minutes than did meperidine alone (N = 17; mean age = 39.5 years), which indicates greater ventilatory depression with the combination than with hydroxyzine alone. However, PaO2, PaCO2 and pH remained within the awake normal ranges for PaO2, PaCO2, and pH for the age group of volunteers even at 10 minutes after IV injection of the drug combination when most of the volunteers were asleep. In conclusion, hydroxyzine even when given IV in excess of the maximum IM therapeutic doses caused no changes in PaO2, PaCO2 or pH, which would indicate clinically important ventilatory depression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of hydroxyzine and meperidine on arterial blood gases in healthy human volunteers. 249 48
Conflicting reports exist for the efficacy of intermittent wound perfusion with bupivacaine in the relief of postoperative
pain
. A study was devised to assess postoperative
pain
relief objectively using a Patient Controlled Analgesic Device (PCAD) during continuous wound perfusion with bupivacaine or saline. Thirty consecutive patients undergoing cholecystectomy were randomised to receive continuous postoperative wound perfusion with 0.5% bupivacaine for 24 h followed by normal saline for a further 24 h or vice versa. During the study period, conventional analgesia was provided using a PCAD set to deliver (and record the number of) on-demand bolus doses of intravenous pethidine 0.2 mg/kg at half-hourly intervals as required.
Pethidine
requirements were higher on the first postoperative day, regardless of which solution was given, but bupivacaine perfusion almost halved mean linear analogue
pain
scores compared to those recorded with saline. Likewise, the number of bolus doses of pethidine demanded was reduced by an average of 68% compared to those recorded during saline perfusion on day 1 (P = 0.01) and by 82% on day 2 (P = 0.01). When assessed by objective criteria, perfusion of surgical wounds with bupivacaine after cholecystectomy produces better
pain
relief than wound perfusion with saline.
...
PMID:Wound perfusion with bupivacaine: objective evidence for efficacy in postoperative pain relief. 260 50
Variations among 32 midwives involved in a total of 1578 deliveries were studied regarding attitudes to and use of obstetrical analgesia. Relevant data were obtained from the register of the maternity department of a Swedish regional hospital. This was complemented with information about the midwives' attitudes to pharmacological
pain
relief in labour and delivery, collected by means of a mailed questionnaire. Variations between midwives (range), expressed as percentages of each midwife's total number of deliveries, were considerable: epidural block (EDA), 9-48%;
Pethidine
, 0-41%; Entonox (N2O/O2), 8-62%; pudendal block (PDB), 11-71%. Midwives working on night-shift used less EDA, but more pethidine, than their day-shift colleagues. 59% of all the midwives were critical of current levels of obstetrical use of analgesics in Sweden, while 41% felt the level to be about right. Night-shift midwives were rather more critical than day-shift midwives. Midwives critical of current levels of obstetric medication used EDA and PDB less often than their more enthusiastic colleagues, but the difference was not statistically significant. On the other hand, critical midwives used more
Pethidine
(p less than 0.05) and also more Entonox than their less critical colleagues, though again the difference was statistically non-significant.
...
PMID:Variations between midwives regarding administration of obstetrical analgesia. 276 84
Pethidine
requirements and verbal
pain
scores were recorded in 36 patients after cholecystectomy via subcostal incision. All patients also received 20 ml 0.5% bupivacaine with adrenaline 1/200,000. Group 1 (12 patients) received unilateral intercostal nerve blocks. Interpleural catheters were inserted through the 8th intercostal space in the remaining patients; 12 received local anaesthetic via the catheter immediately after surgery (Group 2) and 12 were given local anaesthetic at three hours (Group 3). Small asymptomatic pneumothoraces were noted on chest X-ray in six of the 24 patients with interpleural catheters. Both types of local anaesthesia produced lower
pain
scores than pethidine alone (P less than 0.05) with 25% of intercostal nerve blocks and 63% of interpleural catheters requiring no pethidine in the following three hours. The provision of catheter 'top-ups' between six and 18 hours after surgery also resulted in lower
pain
scores and a reduction in pethidine requirements (P less than 0.05).
...
PMID:Interpleural administration of bupivacaine after cholecystectomy: a comparison with intercostal nerve block. 277 45
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