Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0151744 (myocardial ischemia)
31,282 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Premedication of patients requiring cardiac surgery should provide adequate analgesia, sedation and anxiolysis for the stress and pain associated with preoperative preparation and placement of monitoring catheters. Ideally, these effects would be achieved without producing respiratory depression and hypoxia, which could be life-threatening to patients at risk for myocardial ischemia. Ketorolac, a nonsteroidal, antiinflammatory agent, has previously been shown to provide postoperative pain relief comparable to that provided by morphine, without respiratory depression. This study compared the incidence of arterial blood desaturation, respiratory depression, and patient comfort after preoperative medication with scopolamine and ketorolac versus scopolamine and morphine. Scopolamine and ketorolac premedication provided sedation and analgesia comparable to that provided by scopolamine and morphine, without significant respiratory depression. Since ketorolac has no central respiratory depressant effect, it may be a useful alternative to morphine for premedication in the cardiac surgical patient.
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PMID:Ketorolac as a premedicant for coronary artery bypass surgery patients with normal ventricles. 813 95

This double-blind randomized trial assessed the effect of adding an intravenous continuous infusion of ketorolac to a patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) morphine regimen on analgesia, heart rate, arterial blood pressure, and postoperative myocardial ischemia. Patients having elective total hip or knee replacement were randomized to receive ketorolac 30 mg bolus, followed by an infusion of 5 mg/h for 24 h or placebo. All patients had access to PCA morphine (20 microg/kg bolus, with a lockout of 6 min). Patients were monitored for pain visual analog scale, blood pressure, heart rate, and ST segment depression via a continuous Holter monitor. ST depression of 1 mm 60 ms after the J point was considered significant if it lasted more than 1 min. There was no difference in demographics, risk factors, or cardiac medications between the groups. Ketorolac-treated patients had significantly better pain control at 2, 6, and 24 h. There was significant morphine sparing at all times after 3 h. There was no difference in the number of ischemic events between the groups. The ischemic episodes of the patients who received ketorolac occurred at slower heart rates (97 +/- 15 vs 114 +/- 16 bpm, P = 0.001) than those of patients in the placebo group. The duration of ST depression was shorter in ketorolac-treated patients (24 +/- 35 vs 76 +/- 95 min, P < 0.05). All ST depressions were clinically silent. Logistic regression of factors predicting ischemia included the use of calcium channel blockers and low pain score. These results suggest that analgesia with ketorolac reduces the duration of ischemic episodes in the first 24 h postoperatively.
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PMID:The addition of continuous intravenous infusion of ketorolac to a patient-controlled analgetic morphine regime reduced postoperative myocardial ischemia in patients undergoing elective total hip or knee arthroplasty. 908 43