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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Renal amyloidosis was diagnosed in 14 young Chinese Shar Pei dogs, all of which were related. Clinical signs were those of renal failure and included
vomiting
, anorexia, lethargy, polydipsia, polyuria, weight loss, and dehydration. Some dogs had a history of intermittent fever and joint swelling. Laboratory findings also were compatible with renal failure and included azotemia, hyperphosphatemia, low total
CO2
content in serum, isosthenuria, proteinuria, and hypercholesterolemia. All dogs had medullary deposition of amyloid, and 9 of 14 (64%) had glomerular involvement. The remaining renal lesions were typical of end-stage renal disease. In some dogs, amyloid deposits were found in other tissues (eg, liver, spleen, stomach, small intestine, myocardium, lymph node, prostate gland, thyroid gland, and pancreas). Amyloid deposits were sensitive to potassium permanganate oxidation, suggesting the presence of amyloid protein AA.
...
PMID:Familial renal amyloidosis in Chinese Shar Pei dogs. 221 Dec 93
Nalbuphine hydrochloride, an agonist-antagonist opioid, is reported to reverse the respiratory depression of moderate doses of fentanyl (20 micrograms.kg-1) and still provide good analgesia. We report four patients having abdominal aortic aneurysm repair in which we attempted to reverse the respiratory depression of large doses of fentanyl (50-75 micrograms.kg-1) with nalbuphine (0.3 mg.kg-1, 0.1 mg.kg-1 or 0.05 mg.kg-1). Nalbuphine reversed respiratory depression in all four patients and the respiratory rate increased from 10 to 23 breaths per minute, end-tidal
CO2
decreased from 7.0 +/- 0.3 per cent to 5.6 +/- 0.7 per cent, and peak inspiratory pressure after 0.1 seconds increased from 4 +/- 1.4 to 13 +/- 2.6 mmHg. However, hypertension, increased heart rate, and significant increase in analogue pain scores accompanied reversal of respiratory depression. Agitation, nausea,
vomiting
, and cardiac dysrhythmias also were observed frequently. We do not recommend the use of nalbuphine to facilitate early extubation of the trachea after large doses of fentanyl for abdominal aortic surgery.
...
PMID:Side effects of nalbuphine while reversing opioid-induced respiratory depression: report of four cases. 165
A relation was found between persistent stridor and gastroesophageal reflux in seven infants, aged 6 weeks to 6 months. Stridor began at 11 days to 2 months of age, and four of the seven infants had transient hypercarbia on at least one occasion before study. Only one had a history of frequent
vomiting
; three had recurrent pneumonia. Midesophageal pH, chest and abdominal movement, exhaled
carbon dioxide
partial pressure, and heart rate of six of the infants were recorded for 4 to 12 hours as they slept. Esophageal pH of the seventh infant was recorded for 24 hours. In the six completely studied infants, there were persistent increases of greater than 10 mm Hg in exhaled
carbon dioxide
level (three infants), of greater than 10 breaths per minute in respiratory rate (four infants), and in retractions and stridor (six infants) 5 to 20 minutes after onset of reflux. Stridor improved with medical management in 48 hours (five of five infants) and disappeared in 3 weeks (three of five infants) to 2 months (one of five infants). One of these medically treated infants subsequently was treated by Nissen gastric fundoplication because of a recurrence of persistent and severe stridor. Three infants had antireflux surgery, and in two of these stridor disappeared in 48 hours. In the third infant stridor disappeared 3 weeks after surgery. Based on this experience, reflux occasionally causes stridor, probably because of acute inflammation of the upper airway. If structural anomalies are ruled out, infants with severe stridor should be examined for gastroesophageal reflux.
...
PMID:Stridor and gastroesophageal reflux in infants. 233 26
T-2 toxin, a trichothecene mycotoxin, was injected iv or ip in the single lethal dose of 2 mg/kg.
Vomiting
was elicited in normal and decerebrate cats with an average onset time of 26.6 min. Chronic ablation of the area postrema significantly delayed the emetic latency to 304 min. Polygraph recording revealed a steady decline in mean arterial blood pressure and pulse pressure to an extreme shock level resulting in death after 5 to 15 hr. Heart rate varied unremarkably throughout the course of circulatory failure, and the cardiac beat persisted after respiratory arrest. No protection against the lethal response was afforded by midbrain decerebration, area postrema ablation, section of the carotid sinus and vagus nerves, and high spinal cord transection supported with artificial ventilation. Effects of T-2 toxin on central and reflex control of breathing were evaluated through changes in VT/FACO2 and f/VT relationships generated by delivery of
CO2
enriched gas for inhalation. Central
CO2
responsiveness was well maintained under all tested neurological conditions up to the stage of terminal collapse with late decreases in delta VT/delta FACO2 gain and FACO2 setpoint. A toxin-induced progressive increase in resting frequency and an associated decrease in delta f/delta VT gain was found in unanesthetized decerebrate cats, though resting f did not change remarkably in the anesthetized brain-intact cats. In vagotomized brain-intact cats, the delta f/delta VT gain was sustained at zero. These findings indicate that T-2 toxin exercised minimal influence on the brain stem
CO2
-VT regulator but it caused an acceleration of the central respiratory oscillator after interruption of forebrain connections.
...
PMID:Neural factors in acute emetic, cardiovascular, and respiratory effects of T-2 toxin in cats. 251 68
The sedative effects of medetomidine at doses of 20 and 40 micrograms/kg im given alone or followed 16-18 min later by fentanyl (2 micrograms/kg iv) was investigated in 6 bitches of mixed breeds. The higher dose of medetomidine alone caused the greater degree of sedation, but two bitches were only lightly sedated with either dose. Side effects noted in some cases included apparent pain on injection,
vomiting
on induction of sedation, bradycardia, slowing of respiratory rate, cyanosis and muscular twitching. The intravenous injection of fentanyl caused a marked increase in depth of sedation in all animals, inducing a condition similar to neuroleptanaesthesia in which the eyes were rotated downward and the pedal reflex abolished. Slight twitching and sensitivity to sound occurred immediately after fentanyl injection, but this was transient. The cardiopulmonary effects of medetomidine (40 micrograms/kg im) followed 20 min later by either fentanyl (2 micrograms/kg iv) or a saline placebo were investigated in 4 beagle dogs. Medetomidine caused bradycardia, hypotension and reduced respiratory rate, inducing an intermittent respiratory pattern. The iv injection of fentanyl did not further alter the heart or respiratory rate or blood pressure. However there was a small but significant decrease in arterial oxygen tension and rise in arterial
carbon dioxide
tension. indicating some respiratory depression. We conclude that the use of intravenous fentanyl to dogs already sedated with medetomidine could prove useful in clinical cases where the initial sedation with medetomidine has proved inadequate.
...
PMID:The use of medetomidine/fentanyl combinations in dogs. 257 Dec 71
The side-effects of two opioid agonist-antagonists, nalbuphine and pentazocine, were assessed when used for patient-controlled postoperative analgesia. Forty ASA I or II patients scheduled for upper abdominal surgery were randomly allocated to two equal groups. The anaesthetic technique was the same for all the patients: premedication with atropine and diazepam, induction with thiopentone and suxamethonium and maintenance with fentanyl, pancuronium, nitrous oxide and halothane. Patient-controlled computer assisted analgesia (On-Demand Analgesia Computer) was started in the recovery room at least 2 h after the last administration of fentanyl. The parameters used were: a routine hourly dose (the half of that received during the previous hour), with on demand delivery of nalbuphine (15 micrograms.kg-1) or pentazocine (45 micrograms.kg-1) aliquots respectively, with a refractory period between two demands of 4 min and a total hourly maximum dose of 16 mg and 48 mg respectively. The following parameters were measured before the start of self-administration, and every hour afterwards for 24 h: systolic (Pasys) and diastolic blood pressures, heart rate, pressure-rate product (PRP), respiratory rate, end-tidal
CO2
and pain (by way of a three point scale). Analgesia was assessed on a four-point scale every 6 h. The total doses of nalbuphine and pentazocine administered were 94 +/- 43 mg and 251 +/- 150 mg respectively. The only parameters significantly different between the two groups were Pasys and PRP, being higher in the pentazocine group. There were no significant differences in the side-effects (drowsiness, nausea,
vomiting
, headache, amnesia, logorrhoea and urine retention). All patients in both groups were satisfied with this technique.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Comparison of nalbuphine and pentazocine in the treatment of postoperative pain by self-administration]. 266 Jun 40
We conducted a study to determine the type, incidence, and timing of complications that occur in patients who have a
carbon monoxide
(CO) exposure serious enough to require hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT). Complication data were retrospectively collected from a ten-year period for 297 consecutive CO-poisoned emergency department patients who received HBOT. HBOT was indicated for 41% of the patients because of an elevated carboxyhemoglobin (COHb) level alone. Central nervous system dysfunction, including loss of consciousness, and/or cardiovascular dysfunction, was the criteria for HBOT in 59% of patients, regardless of their COHb level. The mean peak COHb level was 38 mg%, with 88% of patients having a peak COHb level greater than 25 mg%. The mortality rate was 6% in this case series. Cardiac arrest occurred in 8% of patients; all experienced their first arrest prior to HBOT. The 3% of patients who sustained an isolated respiratory arrest and those who had a myocardial infarction did so prior to HBOT. Several complications, however, occurred for the first time or as a recurrent event during HBOT. These included
emesis
(6%), seizures (5%), agitation requiring restraints or sedation (2%), cardiac dysrhythmias or arrests (2%), and arterial hypotension (2%). No patient's level of consciousness deteriorated subsequent to the initial resuscitation except for those who later had a generalized seizure. The most significant complication attributable to HBOT was tension pneumothorax, noted in three patients (1%).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Complications and protocol considerations in carbon monoxide-poisoned patients who require hyperbaric oxygen therapy: report from a ten-year experience. 224 Jul 43
Carbon monoxide
poisoning causes tissue hypoxia because of reduced transfer and altered release of oxygen by hemoglobin. Considering many case histories, we realized that symptoms and clinical signs of acute poisoning are mostly neurologic: coma, headache, dizziness,
vomiting
. On the contrary, it seems that myocardium, the other organ which mostly requires O2, is attacked in a "silent way". ECG in 5 patients with accidental
carbon monoxide
poisoning underlined that cardiac rate increased (3 of them presented tachyarrhythmias by atrial fibrillation) and the presence of more or less important alteration of ventricular repolarization like "subendocardial lesion". Simple hyperbaric oxygen treatment determined the regression of the rhythm disorder and of the abnormalities of ventricular repolarization. The only patient who had not the restoration of sinus rhythm had chronic atrial fibrillation.
...
PMID:[Cardiologic aspects of carbon monoxide poisoning]. 275 46
A rare case of Richter's hernia after laparoscopy, the 2nd such hernia reported among a total of 4 cases of small bowel hernia, is presented. This patient was a 32-year old woman who had Hulka clip sterilization without any difficulties, using a 10 mm trocar and a Wolff laparoscope, with 3 liter
carbon dioxide
for induction of pneumoperitoneum. Her symptoms were only severe pain and
vomiting
starting on the 5th postoperative day, and a hematoma-like swelling. Since her pain was so intense, the area was explored under general anesthesia the same day. A plum-sized, strangulated loop of the jejunum was apparent, with serous fluid but no blood, incarcerated between the skin and the abdominal muscles. A small serosal laceration in the bowel was corrected with 2 interrupted Dexon sutures. Symptoms of hernia have occurred 3-15 days after laparoscopy in previously reported cases. It is fortunate that this patient was not treated as though she had a hematoma, since serious perforation of the bowel and peritonitis would have resulted. It is important to insure that all gas has flowed out of the abdomen before removing the laparoscope or the trocar sheath, and advisable to shake the abdomen wall carefully while removing the instruments, to prevent this complication.
...
PMID:Incarcerated Richter's hernia after laparoscopy: a case report. 296 30
We report the biochemical results in 90 women presenting to an eating disorders clinic: 61 who had bulimia, 22 with anorexia nervosa and seven unclassified. The results were compared with 30 control women. The group of women with an eating disorder had significantly higher concentrations of total
CO2
, calcium, AST, ALT, ALP, albumin and cholesterol and significantly lower concentrations of potassium, chloride and phosphate in the plasma. The elevated calcium could be accounted for in part by an increase in total
CO2
and an increase in albumin. Hypokalaemia was strongly associated with self-induced
vomiting
and laxative abuse. Biochemical abnormalities occurred in both forms of eating disorders; however, hypercholesterolaemia was more common in anorexia nervosa and abnormal liver enzymes were more common in bulimia.
...
PMID:Biochemical abnormalities in anorexia nervosa and bulimia. 310 18
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