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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The perioperative effects of administering sedative and analgesic drugs prior to outpatient surgery were evaluated. One hundred fifty adult outpatients were randomly assigned to one of six study groups according to a double-blind protocol design. Patients were given placebo (saline) or midazolam (5 mg im) 30-60 min prior to surgery, and then either placebo, oxymorphone (1 mg iv), or fentanyl (100 micrograms iv) 3-5 min prior to a standardized anesthetic technique. Preoperatively, midazolam premedication was associated with a significantly lower anxiety level (37 +/- 29 mm vs. 50 +/- 32 mm, P less than 0.05), higher sedation level (254 +/- 136 mm vs. 145 +/- 109 mm, P less than 0.01), worsening of psychomotor skill (5 +/- 5 vs. 2 +/- 2 dots missed, P less than 0.01; midazolam vs. placebo), and impaired recall abilities. In addition, use of midazolam did not prolong the discharge time. Compared to control patients, those who received fentanyl had a decreased incidence of intraoperative airway difficulties such as
coughing
(28% vs. 0%, P less than 0.01). Although use of opioids increased the incidence of postoperative nausea (42% vs. 18%, P less than 0.01) and
vomiting
(23% vs. 2%, P less than 0.01; opioid vs. no opioid), average recovery times were not affected by opioid administration. Oxymorphone use was associated with a lower incidence of pain at home compared with that following fentanyl (46% vs. 74%, P less than 0.05). Finally, preoperative administration of both midazolam and fentanyl or oxymorphone prior to a standardized methohexital-nitrous oxide anesthetic technique did not adversely affect recovery after outpatient surgery.
...
PMID:Outpatient premedication: use of midazolam and opioid analgesics. 247 48
Inpatient and community-based care can be complementary in relation to the management of HIV disease. Medical records from 200 inpatients of Chikankata Hospital near Lusaka, Zambia and 200 home based patients were examined and compared for the common symptoms of presentation of HIV disease, associated opportunistic infections, and treatment protocols. Drug costs of both groups were also compared. The most common respiratory symptoms in the 2 groups are
cough
, chest pains, weight loss, and hemoptysis. Treatment employed for these symptoms were cortimoxazole, penicillin V, erthromycin, and tetracycline. Acetyl saliclic acid and paracetamol were used for pain relief in both groups. Gastointestinal system symptoms for both groups were diarrhea, weight loss, abdominal pain, and
vomiting
. Cotrimoxazole and metronidazole were used in treating diarrhea. Additional treatment protocol for the 2 patient samples included oral rehydration therapy for dehydration, antacid or bismuth subsalicylate for diarrhea and enteritis, and mycostatin for oral candidiasis. Central nervous system symptomatology included headache, dementia, neckace, and lethargy. Chloramphenicol was employed in treating bacterial meningitis. Diazepam and chlorpromazine were effective for restless patients. Genito-urinary system symptomatology for the 2 groups included dysuria, genital ulcers, hematuria, viral warts, and buboes. Antibodies were used for sexually transmitted diseases and infections. Skin symptomatology included rash and dermatitis, herpes zoster, abscess, kaposi's sarcoma, ulcers, furunculosis, and discharging anal sinus. In treating these symptoms, hospital based care and home based care were similar. Overall, it was found that hospital treatment protocols were detailed, expensive, and time consuming. Furthermore, hospital treatment for HIV positive patients is more expensive than HIV negative patients; hospital costs for 50 HIV negative patients totaled US$415.94 compared to US$1204.98 HIV positive/PTB negative patients and US$1705.62 for HIV positive/PTB positive patients. Drug cost/patient admission is increased by 469% if HIV positive. (author's modified).
...
PMID:Clinical care as part of integrated AIDS management in a Zambian rural community. 248 94
Recovery from anesthesia and the effect of premedication, induction agent and the individual anesthetist on the measure of recovery was assessed in 707 patients scheduled to undergo short surgical procedures. Patients were randomly allocated to receive either alfentanil or enflurane as a supplement to an induction agent, nitrous oxide/oxygen anesthetic technique with or without premedication. Patients who received alfentanil had a faster immediate recovery than those who received enflurane (p less than 0.001). Total anesthetic time was shorter in the alfentanil group (p = 0.02). For 36 of 37 anesthetists recovery was faster in the alfentanil group compared to the enflurane group. Choice of premedication and induction agent had a significant effect on recovery, thiopentone or lorazepam prolonged recovery time in each group. Although the alfentanil group had a higher incidence of apnoea, movement and
vomiting
(p less than 0.001), the enflurane group had a higher incidence of
coughing
(p less than 0.001) and shivering (p = 0.004). Overall the anesthetists assessed the alfentanil technique as excellent or good in more patients than the enflurane technique.
...
PMID:A multicentre trial in spontaneously breathing patients. A comparison of recovery following alfentanil or enflurane. 249 60
An 81-year-old woman had chills, fever, nausea,
vomiting
, and epigastric pain. On day 3 she had hematuria and was treated with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole. On day 5 she had a
cough
, hypotension, anemia, azotemia, and elevated hepatic enzyme levels. Her condition deteriorated with thrombocytopenia, anuria requiring dialysis, edema, and hypoalbuminemia. Treatment with chloramphenicol and doxycycline was started on day 10. By day 11, she was in hypotensive shock; on day 12 she had seizures and died. Murine typhus was diagnosed by demonstration of antibodies to Rickettsia typhi by indirect immunofluorescence. Necropsy revealed interstitial pneumonia, pulmonary edema, hyaline membranes, alveolar hemorrhages, petechiae and vasculitis in the central nervous system, interstitial myocarditis, multifocal interstitial nephritis and hemorrhages, splenomegaly, portal triaditis, and mucosal hemorrhages in urinary tract. Immunofluorescent R. typhi were demonstrated in the lungs, brain, kidneys, liver, and heart. This unusual death occurred in an elderly patient without rash who was treated too late with antirickettsial drugs.
...
PMID:Histopathology and immunohistologic demonstration of the distribution of Rickettsia typhi in fatal murine typhus. 249 81
Toxicosis caused by Anabaena spiroides was diagnosed in 7 of 26 finishing hogs in a farrow-to-finish operation in Kentucky. Several sick pigs in the herd had the following clinical signs:
vomiting
, dull appearance, lethargy, anorexia, muscle tremors, frothing at the mouth,
coughing
, sneezing, dyspnea, and bloody diarrhea. Of the 7 dead pigs, 2 were necropsied. Tissue speciments and stomach contents were obtained for microscopic, microbiologic, and toxicologic evaluations. In addition, vomitus from sick pigs and pond water samples were collected for laboratory analysis. Direct microscopic examination of pond water, vomitus, and stomach contents revealed nearly pure A spiroides, a toxic blue-green algae. The possible involvement of bacterial toxins in these pigs was not established; however, the laboratory and field data suggested that the clinical signs and death losses were attributable to the consumption of pond water mixed with the bloom of the alga, A spiroides.
...
PMID:Blue-green algae (Anabaena spiroides) toxicosis in pigs. 250 12
Intraoperative analgesia is the purview of anesthesiologists whereas postoperative pain is traditionally managed by surgeons. This series reports 19 months experience of anesthesiologists using epidural opiate analgesia (EOA) or patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) to treat postoperative pain in 302 patients following surgery for pelvic malignancy. For the 244 (81%) patients who received EOA, a lumbar epidural catheter was placed just prior to surgery, injected with local anesthetic for intraoperative analgesia, and injected with preservative-free morphine at appropriate intervals postoperatively to relieve pain. Fifty-eight patients (19%) used PCA which consisted of small self-administered boluses of intravenous narcotics. All patients were seen daily to ensure adequate analgesia and to treat side effects. Utilizing a 0-10 verbal rating scale (0 = no pain; 10 = worst pain imaginable), mean pain with EOA was 0.75 at rest and 2.6 with
coughing
. Mean pain ratings with PCA were 2.8 at rest and 5.0 during
coughing
. Side effects with EOA included nausea or
vomiting
(28%) and pruritus (20%). The only side effect of significance with PCA was nausea or
vomiting
(21%). All patients improved with treatment of side effects. Acceptance of these techniques is indicated by a steady increase in the number of gynecologic oncology surgical patients utilizing these modalities (50% at the outset to 87% currently).
...
PMID:Postoperative pain management in gynecology oncology patients utilizing epidural opiate analgesia and patient-controlled analgesia. 259 69
Vomiting
as a dominant symptom in a patient with acute asthma is reported. The traditionally recognized triad of
cough
, tachypnea and wheezing were absent or trivial whenever this patient presented with persistent
vomiting
. A careful history, laboratory evaluation and a course of bronchodilators eventually ascertained that the episodes of
vomiting
were due to attacks of acute asthma. It is suggested that acute asthma be included in the differential diagnosis of recurrent and/or severe
vomiting
in children.
...
PMID:Vomiting as the main presenting symptom of acute asthma. 260 27
Nasogastric (NG) decompression after colorectal surgery is practiced commonly. Our aim was to determine whether routine NG decompression benefitted patients undergoing this type of surgery. Five hundred thirty-five patients were randomized prospectively to either NG decompression or no decompression. Stratification was by type of operation and patient age. Excluded were patients who had emergency surgery with peritonitis, extensive fibrous adhesions, enterotomies, previous pelvic irradiation, intra-abdominal infection, pancreatitis, chronic obstruction. prolonged operating times, or difficult endotracheal intubation. Two hundred seventy-four patients received NG decompression (Salem sump, Argyle Co., Division of Sherwood Medical, St. Louis, MO) and two hundred sixty-one did not. There were 33 protocol violations included in the 535 patients. Patients who were not decompressed experienced significantly more abdominal distention, nausea, and
vomiting
than did those patients who were. Moreover, 13% required subsequent NG decompression as opposed to a reinsertion rate of 5% for patients routinely decompressed. The mean length of hospitalization for both groups was 11 days. There were no significant differences in nasopharyngeal or gastric bleeding, inability to
cough
effectively, respiratory infections, wound disruptions, reoperation, and wound infection rates (5%) between the two groups. We conclude that even though there is an increase in the rate of minor symptoms of nausea,
vomiting
, and abdominal distention, routine nasgastric decompression is not warranted after elective colon and rectal surgery.
...
PMID:Elective colon and rectal surgery without nasogastric decompression. A prospective, randomized trial. 265 80
Leiomyoma of the esophagus is not uncommon in the adult population but is rarely seen in children; only 20 cases have been reported in the pediatric population. In this paper we describe two cases of esophageal leiomyoma in female patients aged 6 and 13 years and review previous reports. Several differences were noted between the pediatric and adult population. The mean age in children is 14 years (range, 4 to 20 years). Leiomyoma appears 1.71 times more often in females than in males. Localized lesions are found in only 9%, whereas the diffuse form predominates in 91%. The entire esophagus may be involved 35% of the time, and encroachment on the cardia or upper stomach occurs in 70%. Leiomyomas associated with familial syndromes (familial leiomyoma and Alport's syndrome) occur in 22% of the cases. Major symptoms include dysphagia (86%), dyspnea (36%),
vomiting
(27%), retrosternal pain (27%), and
coughing
(22%). The initial diagnosis following contrast studies is most often achalasia. The diagnosis of leiomyoma is made only with subsequent endoscopy. Enucleation was performed in only 11% of the cases; surgical resection (including part of the stomach) was necessary in 78% with a 21% postoperative mortality. Esophageal leiomyoma should be considered in the differential diagnosis of mediastinal masses and esophageal obstruction. Accurate preoperative diagnosis is desirable in order to plan proper surgical treatment.
...
PMID:Esophageal leiomyoma in children: two case reports and review of the literature. 268 58
A 35-year-old obese black American woman presented with nausea,
vomiting
, diarrhea, fever,
cough
, and chest pain of 2 weeks duration. She was pancytopenic and acidotic, with respiratory failure and hypotension. A diagnosis of septic shock was made, and the patient died 48 hours after admission. Blood cultures were positive for organisms that were reported to be Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis. At autopsy she had massive hepatic necrosis with numerous Mikulicz's cells. The lungs, spleen, and bone marrow were also involved. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a case of systemic infection with K rhinoscleromatis.
...
PMID:Disseminated Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis infection. 268 80
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