Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0085383 (hypocapnia)
1,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We can state that an effective pain relief during labour, like epidural analgesia, is indicated and it prevents or modifies the pain-induced harmful effects on mother and the fetus. Maternal and fetal ACTH or BE response in labour are not altered, but the increase of maternal cortisol secretion is reduced, thus probably suggesting a lesser maternal stress, to which also point the changes of PRL. Epidural analgesia prevents harmful maternal metabolic changes like hyperventilation, hypocapnia, metabolic acidosis and lactic acid accumulation. These beneficial effects are also reflected in a better fetal and neonatal condition. Carbohydrate and fat metabolism, on the contrary, seem not to be significantly changed by epidural analgesia. Epidural analgesia is beneficial also by reducing the pain induced catecholamine release, and by improving the intervillous blood flow, especially in pre-eclamptic parturients.
...
PMID:Maternal and fetal effects of epidural analgesia during labour. 299 Jan 22

Hyperventilation may be induced by several organic factors. The HVS-hyperventilation and symptoms such as hypertonia and pain-hypocapnia and disturbance of the acid-base balance--other symptoms--anxiousness--hyperventilation--etc. In the adaptation-hyperventilation and symptoms such as hypertonia and pain,-hupocapnia and disturbance of the acid-base balance-other symptoms--anxiousness--hyperventilation--etc. In the adaptation process one distinguishes the load, the strain and a tension or counterforce (stress). In the cause and effect relationship between the adaptation process and a specific pathology, it is obvious that the strain is the only element capable of eliciting the specific pathology or syndrome. Stress is a compensation for the strain and is therefore beneficial to the organism. The strain is associated with, amongst other things, anxiety and changes in the pyridoxine-L-tryptophan metabolism (nicotinic acid-ribonucleotide synthesis). Stress depends to a large extent on the intact serotonergic transmission in the cerebrum. But serotonin synthesis is critically dependent on the pyridoxine-L-tryptophan metabolism. Benzodiazepines improve the hyperventilation, anxiousness and strain, if these are of the free-floating anxiety type. Tricyclic preparations improve anxiousness in as much as it assumes the character of fear, phobia or an anxiety attack. They are active against strain when that reveals itself as an anxiety attack. Pyridoxine and L-tryptophan as serotonergic agonists, improve the hyperventilation, have a beneficial effect on symptoms such as hypertonia and pain, are effective against anxiousness and anxiety and potentiate the stress. In addition they directly correct the property of strain, i.e. the disturbance of the nicotinicacid-ribonucleotide synthesis. Clomipramine is the most potent serotonergic agonist available. That substance has a favourable effect on hyperventilation, hypertonia and pain, on anxiousness that expresses itself as fear, phobia or an anxiety attack. It favours stress. Further investigation is desirable, in particular of the new serotonergic agonists that have recently been made available or are still to come.
...
PMID:[Pharmacotherapy of the hyperventilation syndrome]. 614 57

The purpose of this study is to investigate the mechanisms of the effect of hyperventilation on the spinal pain modulating system by using phentolamine. Under enflurane anaesthesia, cats received mid-collicular decerebration and lumbar laminectomy. The spinal cord was transected at T12-L1. WDR cells, responding primarily to noxious peripheral stimuli, were sampled with a microelectrode at the depth of 2,000 microns from the cord dorsum. Following the control period, ventilation was changed to induce hypocapnia of PCO2 20-25 mmHg. After activities were well suppressed, phentolamine 0.5 mg with normal saline 1.0 ml was injected on the spinal cord. Changes of firings were investigated. When normocapnia was resumed, recovery followed. Hypocapnia of PCO2 20-25 mmHg significantly suppressed the activities of WDR cells. Phentolamine significantly antagonized the suppressive effects of hyperventilation upon the activities of WDR cells. Our results suggest that the hyperventilation has suppressive effects on single-unit activity of WDR cell and the mechanisms of those suppressive effects are related to adrenergic pain modulating system.
...
PMID:[Effects of hyperventilation upon the spinal pain modulating system (third report)]. 781 94

The purpose of this study is to investigate the effect of hyperventilation on the spinal pain modulating system by using naloxone. Under enflurane anaesthesia, cats were prepared with midcollicular decerebration and lumbar laminectomy. The spinal cord was transected at T12-L1. WDR cells, responding primarily to noxious peripheral stimuli, were sampled with a microelectrode at the depth of 2,000 microns from the cord dorsum. Following the control period, ventilation was adjusted to produce hypocapnia of PCO2 20-25 mmHg. After activities of WDR cells were well suppressed, naloxone 0.1 mg.kg-1 was given intravenously. Changes of firings of WDR cells were investigated. Returning to normocapnia, recovery of firings was followed. Hypocapnia of PCO2 20-25 mmHg significantly suppressed the activities of WDR cells. Naloxone significantly antagonized the suppressive effects of hyperventilation upon the activity of WDR cell. Our results suggest that the hyperventilation has suppressive effects on single-unit activity of WDR cell and the mechanisms of those suppressive effects are related to pain modulating system by endogenous opiates.
...
PMID:[The effects of hyperventilation upon the spinal pain modulating system (second report)]. 818 71

A 92-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital due to hypertension, nausea, pain in the anterior part of the chest, epigastralgia, and tachypnea. During the initial examination of the patient in the emergency ward, she was very excited, howled, and both her hands were numb. Arterial blood gas analysis revealed a marked alkalemia (pH greater than 7.55) and hypocapnia (Pco2 24.1 mmHg). After paper bag re-breathing, the pH and Pco2 were within normal limits. Because there was no lesion in the lungs or the brain that would account for hyperventilation and convulsions, the attack was considered to be a manifestation of hyperventilation syndrome should be carefully considered in the differential diagnosis of disturbance of consciousness even in elderly patients.
...
PMID:[Hyperventilation syndrome in a very old woman]. 915 99

Forty-six patients who were exposed to sarin consulted our hospital because of darkness of vision, and ocular pain, vomiting, dyspnea and headaches on June 27 and 28, 1994. Eighteen patients were admitted and 4 of them were in the critical state. There were 6 features: 1) depression of plasma cholinesterase activity (17 of 18 patients, 94%), 2) hypokalemia (4/18, 22%), 3) depression of triglyceride (12/18, 67%), 4) hypocapnia (5/17, 29%), 5) partial pressure of oxygen (PaO2) <80 mmHg, or requirement of O2 inhalation (15/18, 83%), 6) white blood cells (WBC) >9,000 per mm3 (13/18, 72%). Seventeen patients were discharged from hospital, but one patient is still suffering from akinetic mutism after two years.
...
PMID:Eighteen cases exposed to sarin in Matsumoto, Japan. 924 Apr 89

Air hunger (uncomfortable urge to breathe) is a component of dyspnea (shortness of breath). Three human H(2)(15)O positron emission tomography (PET) studies have identified activation of phylogenetically ancient structures in limbic and paralimbic regions during dyspnea. Other studies have shown activation of these structures during other sensations that alert the organism to urgent homeostatic imbalance: pain, thirst, and hunger for food. We employed blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to examine activation during air hunger. fMRI conferred several advantages over PET: enhanced signal-to-noise, greater spatial resolution, and lack of ionizing radiation, enabling a greater number of trials in each subject. Six healthy men and women were mechanically ventilated at 12-14 breaths/min. The primary experiment was conducted at mean end-tidal PCO(2) of 41 Torr. Moderate to severe air hunger was evoked during 42-s epochs of lower tidal volume (mean = 0.75 L). Subjects described the sensation as "like breath-hold," "urge to breathe," and "starved for air." In the baseline condition, air hunger was consistently relieved by epochs of higher tidal volume (mean = 1.47 L). A control experiment in the same subjects under a background of mild hypocapnia (mean end-tidal PCO(2) = 33 Torr) employed similar tidal volumes but did not evoke air hunger, controlling for stimulus variables not related to dyspnea. During each experiment, we maintained constant end-tidal PCO(2) and PO(2) to avoid systematic changes in global cerebral blood flow. Whole-brain images were acquired every 5 s (T2*, 56 slices, voxel resolution 3 x 3 x 3 mm). Activations associated with air hunger were determined using voxel-based interaction analysis of covariance that compared data between primary and control experiments (SPM99). We detected activations not seen in the earlier PET study using a similar air hunger stimulus (Banzett et al. 2000). Limbic and paralimbic loci activated in the present study were within anterior insula (seen in all 3 published studies of dyspnea), anterior cingulate, operculum, cerebellum, amygdala, thalamus, and basal ganglia. Elements of frontoparietal attentional networks were also identified. The consistency of anterior insular activation across subjects in this study and across published studies suggests that the insula is essential to dyspnea perception, although present data suggest that the insula acts in concert with a larger neural network.
...
PMID:BOLD fMRI identifies limbic, paralimbic, and cerebellar activation during air hunger. 1220 70

Vertebroplasty consists of percutaneous injection of acrylic cement--polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA)--into a partially collapsed vertebral body in order to obtain pain relief and augment mechanical stability of the vertebral body. Although vertebroplasty is an efficient treatment it is not free of complications. Our present case report describes a woman with pulmonary polymethylmethacrylate embolism during percutaneous vertebroplasty who presented with hypotension, arrhythmia and hypocapnia.
...
PMID:Pulmonary embolism caused by polymethylmethacrylate during percutaneous vertebroplasty in orthopaedic surgery. 1643 May 51

Stress, acute pain and chronic pain may often result in hyperventilation (HV) which produces hypocapnia. The aim of this fMRI-study was to investigate the influence of hypocapnia on cortical activation during noxious stimulation in 14 healthy volunteers. The intensity of voluntary HV was controlled by capnometry Three tasks were performed in the fMRI sessions: (I) three 3-min HV periods with 7-min periods of recovery in between; (II) mechanically induced phasic pain stimulation--pain task (PT); (III) tapping--motor task (MT). The last two of these protocols were performed under normocapnic and hypocapnic conditions. HV decreased the fMRI signal by 3-7% in all regions of the cortex and subcortical nuclei. This decrease was most prominent in the opercular, frontal and temporal areas. When the PT was performed during hypocapnia a strong reduction in cluster sizes and lower t-values in S1 and insular cortex were found. In contrast MT was accompanied by an increase in cluster sizes and higher t-values. From this we conclude that hypocapnia significantly influences the BOLD signal in nociceptive and motor systems, indicating that either the coupling between the BOLD effect and neuronal processing changed or that the activity in the cortical network which represents the pain processing is decreased. These effects should be considered for functional brain imaging studies on the nociceptive system.
...
PMID:Hypocapnia related changes in pain-induced brain activation as measured by functional MRI. 1651 71

The purpose of this study was to compare the change in thickness of transversus abdominis (TrA) and internal oblique (IO) muscles, during resting supine respiration, in individuals with lumbopelvic pain (LP) to those who in addition to LP, demonstrate signs of concurrent hypocapnia (LP&HYPO). B-mode ultrasound images were obtained at the height of inspiration, and at the end of expiration, over three subsequent breaths during a single session. The average percent change in thickness of TrA during resting respiration in the LP&HYPO group (20.8+/-7.6%) was found to be statistically greater (P<0.001) than that of the LP only group (1.3+/-5.8%), while the difference between the groups for the percent change in thickness of IO (LP&HYPO 9.2+/-8.1%, LP 2.0+/-7.2%) did not differ (P=0.073). These findings suggest that respiratory modulation of TrA thickness, as measured by ultrasound imaging, greater than 20%, detected in a resting supine position, may be associated with an episode of hypocapnia, and if present warrants further investigation.
...
PMID:Ultrasound imaging of the lateral abdominal wall muscles in individuals with lumbopelvic pain and signs of concurrent hypocapnia. 1754 26


1 2 Next >>