Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We carried out a prospective double-blind study to compare the effectiveness of 2% lidocaine hydrocarbonate (54 patients) and 2% lidocaine hydrochloride plus 0.5% bupivacaine hydrochloride (46 patients) in achieving peribulbar block of the orbit in patients undergoing cataract surgery. A total of 150 IU of hyaluronidase was added to each syringe before injection. Anesthesia was done with a total of 6 mL injected into the periphery of the orbit and a further 3 to 4 mL injected for seventh cranial nerve block. A successful block, defined as akinesis of the globe at 4 minutes after injection, was achieved in 94% of the patients, with no difference between the two groups. Two minor complications (transient lateral rectus paresis and a small retrobulbar hematoma) were observed. We recommend this method of peribulbar block as it has a rapid onset and its use may lead to a reduced occurrence of the central nervous system complications associated with retrobulbar block.
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PMID:Peribulbar block for cataract surgery: a prospective double-blind study of two local anesthetics. 274 1

A middle aged man was referred from orthopedics with the complaint of diplopia, which developed 3 weeks after a lumbar puncture for spinal anesthesia. The practitioner should be aware of this rare effect among other common and not so common causes of 6th nerve paresis/paralysis.
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PMID:Sixth nerve palsy after lumbar anesthesia. 274 9

The presently existing local anesthetics (LA) do not guarantee a rapid onset and simultaneously a long duration of action. The combination of a medium-long acting LA with bupivacaine, a long-acting LA with slow onset, could be means to achieve these aims. Prilocaine was chosen as the medium-long acting LA because it has the lowest toxicity of this group and for pharmacological reasons. METHODS. In a prospective, controlled double-blind study 100 patients scheduled for axillary block for elective surgical procedures of the hand or wrist were randomly assigned to five groups. Twenty patients in each group received either 40 ml prilocaine 1.5%; 40 ml bupivacaine 0.375%; 20 ml prilocaine 1% + 20 ml bupivacaine 0.5%; 20 ml prilocaine 2% + 20 ml bupivacaine 0.5%; or 20 ml prilocaine 2% + 20 ml bupivacaine 0.375%. The LA mixtures were freshly mixed 15 min prior to the axillary block. The blocks were performed using an immobile, short-beveled needle by anesthesiologists who were familiar with this technique. Analgesia was classified using the pin-prick method with 0 = no analgesia, 1 = analgesia, 2 = anesthesia. Motor blockade was classified with 0 = no motor block, 1 = paresis, 2 = paralysis. The following nerves were analyzed: ulnar, radial, median, musculocutaneous, and medial antebrachial. In 6 patients of each group plasma levels of the LA were measured by gas chromatography and methemoglobinemia was determined. Statistical analysis of the data was performed using the Student t-test and chi-square test on a level of significance of P less than 0.05. Results. All surgical procedures could be performed as planned in regional anesthesia. Twenty minutes after injection of the LA only 15% of the blocks were sufficient in the bupivacaine group, while in the other four groups 40%-50% of the blocks were complete (P less than 0.05). The degree of analgesia was deeper in the groups with 2% prilocaine and prilocaine alone than in the group with 1% prilocaine. Forty minutes after injection there were no significant differences between the groups. Motor blockade after 20 min was significantly lower in the bupivacaine group than in the prilocaine group (P less than 0.05). After 4 h all three prilocaine-bupivacaine mixtures showed a significantly more pronounced analgesia of the median nerve than the prilocaine group (P less than 0.02-0.001).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical effectiveness and systemic toxicity of various mixtures of prilocaine and bupivacaine in axillary plexus block]. 304 71

Some types of anesthesia, used usually in labor anesthesia (sodium hydroxybutyrate, lexir) or in abdominal delivery (neuroleptanesthesia, cetalar narcosis, electroanesthesia) did not affect distinctly the activity of amine oxidases in blood sera of women in labor and of fetus. In some groups of women in labor the neonates were found, blood serum of which exhibited high activity of diamine oxidase, not observed in normal state. A slight decrease in deamination of benzylamine (20%) and 4-nitrobenzylamine (30%) was observed in patients with gynecological diseases within 2 and 3 days after operations. If intestinal paresis developed in the patients within the postoperational period deamination of these substrates was decreased by 75-80% in blood sera. After 2-4 courses of hyperbaric oxygenation a slight but statistically distinct decrease (by 22-25%) in the rate of deamination of benzylamine and 4-nitrobenzylamine was found in blood sera of the patients.
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PMID:[Changes in the amine oxidase activity of human serum during different types of anesthesia and hyperbaric oxygenation]. 308 35

Carotid endarterectomy in 39 elderly patients was carried out under local anesthesia and neuroleptic analgesia. There were no deaths within 30 days. Two patients required an intraoperative shunt because of signs of ischemic changes (aphasia, motor changes) during two-minute test cross-clamping. In two patients, transient vocal cord paresis was observed, and seven patients (18%) experienced immediate postoperative hypertension. Our results support the contention that in awake elderly patients the need for an intraoperative shunt can be accurately assessed by simple neurological monitoring. Carotid surgery under local anesthesia and neuroleptic analgesia appears to be a safe procedure, and is especially recommended for elderly patients with hypertension, diabetes mellitus or ischemic heart disease.
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PMID:Carotid surgery under local anesthesia in the elderly. 337 34

A case report of prolonged sphincter paresis and muscle weakness of the legs following spinal anesthesia with tetracaine is presented. The case could be placed in one of the three groups of sequelae described by Kane. Tetracaine as responsible for the reaction is suggested.
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PMID:Neurologic deficit following spinal anesthesia. 342 15

A local anaesthetic drug was injected around the peroneal nerve in healthy subjects in order to investigate whether the resulting loss in foot dorsiflexion power in part depended on a gamma-fibre block preventing 'internal' activation of spindle end-organs and thereby depriving the alpha-motoneurones of an excitatory spindle inflow during contraction. The motor outcome of maximal dorsiflexion efforts was assessed by measuring firing rates of individual motor units in the anterior tibial (t.a.) muscle, mean voltage e.m.g. from the pretibial muscles, dorsiflexion force and range of voluntary foot dorsiflexion movements. The tests were performed with and without peripheral conditioning stimuli, such as agonist or antagonist muscle vibration or imposed stretch of the contracting muscles. As compared to control values of t.a. motor unit firing rates in maximal isometric voluntary contractions, the firing rates were lower and more irregular during maximal dorsiflexion efforts performed during subtotal peroneal nerve blocks. During the development of paresis a gradual reduction of motor unit firing rates was observed before the units ceased responding to the voluntary commands. This change in motor unit behaviour was accompanied by a reduction of the mean voltage e.m.g. activity in the pretibial muscles. At a given stage of anaesthesia the e.m.g. responses to maximal voluntary efforts were more affected than the responses evoked by electric nerve stimuli delivered proximal to the block, indicating that impaired impulse transmission in alpha motor fibres was not the sole cause of the paresis. The inability to generate high and regular motor unit firing rates during peroneal nerve blocks was accentuated by vibration applied over the antagonistic calf muscles. By contrast, in eight out of ten experiments agonist stretch or vibration caused an enhancement of motor unit firing during the maximal force tasks. The reverse effects of agonist and antagonist vibration on the ability to activate the paretic muscles were evidenced also by alterations induced in mean voltage e.m.g. activity, dorsiflexion force and range of dorsiflexion movements. The autogenetic excitatory and the reciprocal inhibitory effects of muscle vibration rose in strength as the vibration frequency was raised from 90 to 165 Hz. Reflex effects on maximal voluntary contraction strength similar to those observed during partial nerve blocks were not seen under normal conditions when the nerve supply was intact.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Gamma loop contributing to maximal voluntary contractions in man. 361 76

Among numerous non-traumatic vascular disorders of the hand, only embolism and arterial thrombosis present acute characteristics, exceptional cases of extensive and sudden venous thrombosis apart. These signs are neurological and indicate extreme clinical urgency. Paresis and anesthesia indicate direct arterial surgery, embolectomy, thrombectomy, reconstruction by grafting or prosthesis. When ischemia affects only part of the hand, anticoagulant and vasodilative treatment is often sufficient and upper thoracic sympathectomy is unnecessary.
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PMID:[Treatment of acute ischemia of the hand]. 361 24

Epidural application of local anesthetics or opiates is commonly used for treatment of severe pain or arterial obstruction. We discuss two cases of complications following peridural anesthesia. As an acute complication, a lumbar epidural hematoma developed hours after placement of the catheter and caused sciatic pain and nearly complete paraplegia. The hemorrhage might have been promoted by heparinization. After decompressive hemilaminectomy the patient recovered but was disabled by a persistent paresis. The second patient suffered from renal failure, arterial obstruction, and phantom limb pain. A peridural catheter was kept in place for 6 weeks. Five months later the patient developed severe sciatica. Spinal computed tomography showed compression of the cauda at the L4/5 level (Fig.4) caused by an abscess that was opened and drained. After insertion of a gentamicin - PMMA - chain (Septopal), the wound healed primarily but the patient suffered from persistent pain. The incidence of vessel puncture after insertion of a peridural catheter is about 1%-10%. The risk of hemorrhage, perforation of the dura, and nerve root irritation is increased in scoliotic or elderly patients with a narrow spinal canal. Persistent pain after removal of the catheter is the most important sign. Although paraplegias following peridural catheterization can occur without anticoagulants, even low-dose heparinization is potentially dangerous. The risk of infectious complications after long-term peridural catheterization may be up to 20%. Hematogenous metastatic infection is more common in patients with malignancies or multiple risk factors than continuous immigration of bacteria. Epidural hematomas and spinal abscesses can cause disability and persistent neurological deficit in spite of aggressive surgical and antibiotic therapy.
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PMID:[Lumbar epidural hematoma and spinal abscess following peridural anesthesia]. 368 76

A two-part experimental and clinical study was conducted to determine the effects of administration of a pre-induction dose of suxamethonium, and to see whether the symptoms produced could form the basis of a test dose, to determine sensitivity to suxamethonium prior to administration of a full intubation dose. Suxamethonium was shown to produce distinctive clinical features characterised by signs of both extraocular muscle contraction and paresis, manifest by symptoms of eye and eyelid heaviness without generalised paresis. The dose response was determined in individuals with normal plasma cholinesterase, to a test dose of suxamethonium chloride of between 20 and 1 micrograms/kg. Individuals with abnormal plasma cholinesterase were shown to exhibit sensitivity to these low doses and were easily distinguished from those with normal enzyme. A protocol is suggested which can conveniently establish, prior to induction, those individuals with a reduced ability to hydrolyse suxamethonium.
Anaesthesia 1986 Apr
PMID:A pre-induction test dose for suxamethonium. 370 83


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