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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A young primigravid parturient had an uneventful labour under epidural
analgesia
and delivered a healthy male infant. She returned 48 hours later with fever, vomiting and severe headache, but was misdiagnosed as having endometritis. Further signs of
meningitis
appeared six hours later, however she succumbed to the infection and died four weeks later despite intensive care and high-dose antibiotic management. Causes of
meningitis
in the peripartum period are discussed. The possibility of a causal association between the patient's epidural
analgesia
and her infection are considered and preventive measures discussed.
...
PMID:Mortality from peripartum meningitis. 1085 21
Epidural and spinal blocks are well-accepted regional techniques, but they have several disadvantages. The CSE technique can reduce or eliminate the risks of these disadvantages. CSE block combines the rapidity, density, and reliability of the subarachnoid block with the flexibility of continuous epidural block to extend duration of
analgesia
. The CSE technique is used routinely at many institutions, particularly for major orthopedic surgery and in obstetrics. It has been used in tens of thousands of patients without any reports of major problems. Although at first sight the CSE technique appears to be more complicated than epidural or spinal block alone, intrathecal drug administration and siting of the epidural catheter are both enhanced by the combined, single-space, needle-through-needle method. Concerns about the epidural catheter entering the theca via the small puncture hole are now considered to be unfounded, but as with all epidural catheter techniques, vigilant monitoring of the patient during and after any injection is paramount. CSE is an effective way to reduce the total drug dosage required for anesthesia or
analgesia
. The intrathecal injection achieves rapid onset with minimal doses of local anesthetics and opioids, and the block can be prolonged with low-dose epidural maintenance administration. In addition, the sequential CSE method can be used to extend the dermatomal block with minimal additional drugs or even saline. Reduction in total drug dosage has made truly selective blockade possible. Many studies have confirmed that low-dose CSE with local anesthetic and opioid, or low-dose epidural block alone, will provide effective
analgesia
with minimal motor and proprioceptive block. Such neurologic selective blockade has made it possible for most patients to walk and bear down normally in labor or postoperatively. There remains concern about the risk of infection being increased when the CSE technique is used in place of epidural block alone. Despite a recent flurry of reports of
meningitis
with CSE procedures, there is no evidence the CSE block is more hazardous than epidural or subarachnoid block alone. Arguably, the single-space, needle-through-needle CSE technique will continue to improve with new needle designs and other advances to improve further the success rate and reduce complications, such as neurotrauma, PDPH, and infection. Over the past decade it has become clear that the CSE technique is a significant advance in regional blockade.
...
PMID:The combined spinal-epidural technique. 1093 11
Spinal epidural abscess (SEA) was first described in the medical literature in 1761 and represents a severe, generally pyogenic infection of the epidural space requiring emergent neurosurgical intervention to avoid permanent neurologic deficits. Spinal epidural abscess comprises 0.2 to 2 cases per 10,000 hospital admissions. This review intends to offer detailed evaluation and a comprehensive meta-analysis of the international literature on SEA between 1954 and 1997, especially of patients who developed it following anesthetic procedures in the spinal canal. In this period, 915 cases of SEA were published. This review is the most comprehensive literature analysis on SEA to date. Most cases of SEA occur in patients aged 30 to 60 years, but the youngest patient was only 10 days old and the oldest was 87. The ratio of men to women was 1:0.56. The most common risk factor was diabetes mellitus, followed by trauma, intravenous drug abuse, and alcoholism. Epidural anesthesia or
analgesia
had been performed in 5.5% of the patients with SEA. Skin abscesses and furuncles were the most common source of infection. Of the patients, 71% had back pain as the initial symptom and 66% had fever. The second stage of radicular irritation is followed by the third stage, with beginning neurological deficit including muscle weakness and sphincter incontinence as well as sensory deficits. Paralysis (the fourth stage) affected only 34% of the patients. The average leukocyte count was 15,700/microl (range 1,500-42,000/microl), and the average erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 77 mm in the first hour (range 2-50 mm). Spinal epidural abscess is primarily a bacterial infection, and the gram-positive Staphylococcus aureus is its most common causative agent. This is true also for patients who develop SEA following spinal anesthetics. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) displays the greatest diagnostic accuracy and is the method of first choice in the diagnostic process. Myelography, commonly used previously to diagnose SEA, is no longer recommended. Lumbar puncture to determine cerebrospinal fluid protein concentrations is not needed for diagnosis and entails the risk of spreading bacteria into the subarachnoid space with consequent
meningitis
; therefore, it should not be performed. The therapeutic method of choice is laminectomy combined with antibiotics. Conservative treatment alone is justifiable only for specific indications. Laminotomy is a therapeutic alternative for children. The mortality of SEA dropped from 34% in the period of 1954-1960 to 15% in 1991-1997. At the beginning of the twentieth century, almost all patients with SEA died. Parallel to improvements in the mortality rate, today more patients experience complete recovery from SEA. The prognosis of patients who develop SEA following epidural anesthesia or
analgesia
is not better than that of patients with noniatrogenic SEA, and the mortality rate is also comparable. The essential problem of SEA lies in the necessity of early diagnosis, because only timely treatment is able to avoid or reduce permanent neurologic deficits. The problem with spinal epidural abscesses is not treatment, but early diagnosis - before massive neurological symptoms occur" (Strohecker and Grobovschek 1986).
...
PMID:Spinal epidural abscess: a meta-analysis of 915 patients. 1115 48
Epidural
analgesia
is used as a method of pain relief throughout the UK. It is used short-term in obstetric practice, following surgery and after trauma, and also longer-term for malignancy and chronic pain. Infection may occur as a complication of the technique. Both deep infection, e.g.,
meningitis
, paraspinal and epidural abscesses, and superficial skin infections can occur. To minimize infection risk, epidural catheters should be inserted using an aseptic technique and subsequently checked at least daily, looking for evidence of superficial and deep infection. There should be a dedicated pain team to ensure that education of staff occurs and to carry out regular audits of the service.
...
PMID:Epidural catheter infections. 1116 94
Caudal block is the single most popular regional anesthetic technique used in infants and children. A review of the literature concerning complications related to this technique reveals that it is safe and it has a low failure rate. Probably the incidence of complications of caudal block is 7/10.000, the lowest of all the central blocks. High success rates in performing caudals in children are achieved after a lower caseload than for other regional anesthetic procedures. The success rate in children under 7 years of age is 99%, but most failures occur in the oldest. Caudal anaesthesia can be used for anything surgical under the umbilicus and is an acceptable alternative to general or spinal anaesthesia in premature and high-risk infants, where a regional anaesthesia alone may be preferable. Caudal morphine has been used successfully for postoperative
analgesia
in children of all ages, including neonates after open-heart surgery. Possible complications of this technique are: local anesthetics overdose, vascular penetration and intravascular injection of local anesthetics, dural puncture and total spinal anaesthesia, intraosseous injection, infections,
meningitis
, respiratory depression (when morphine is used). Authors analyze all these complications and the safety rules for their prevention.
...
PMID:[Caudal block in pediatrics]. 1177 7
Angiostrongylus cantonensis is a parasite that causes eosinophilic
meningitis
and has been reported to be present on most Pacific islands. Rats are the principal host and several species of land snails the intermediate host. Important paratenic hosts are fresh water shrimp and fish. Modes of transmission include ingestion by man of raw fish, snails and fresh leafy vegetables contaminated by snail slime trails containing larvae. The parasitic worms are neurotropic in man, and the diagnosis should be considered in any adult or child, who presents, in endemic areas or areas with suitable intermediate hosts, with severe unrelenting headache, paresthesias, or a cranial nerve palsy. Eosinophils in the cerebral spinal fluid suggest the diagnosis. Simple
analgesia
is sufficient for mild cases. Treatment of those with severe symptoms remains controversial. Glucocorticoids, lumbar puncture to reduce intercranial pressure and antihelminthic agents have been used.
...
PMID:Human infections with Angiostrongylus cantonensis. 1201 20
We present the cases of three women who, within a 6-month period, suffered post-partum generalized tonic-clonic seizures. All had received an epidural in labour for
analgesia
and were subsequently diagnosed as suffering from postdural puncture headache. All were treated for that headache with Synacthen and one also received sumatriptan before her seizures. All made satisfactory recoveries and were discharged home. None displayed classical patterns suggestive of pre-eclampsia,
meningitis
, cortical venous thrombosis or any other pathological process that might explain these events adequately, and the specific precipitating factors were left unidentified.
...
PMID:Unexplained fitting in three parturients suffering from postdural puncture headache. 1276 2
We present a case of bacterial meningitis in a 32-year-old parturient following combined spinal-epidural
analgesia
for labour. The patient made a full recovery with no residual neurological sequelae, but important lessons were learnt. Firstly, investigating obstetricians and physicians were unaware that a combined spinal-epidural technique included an intrathecal component, so did not consider treating organisms that might be acquired by this route. Anaesthetists, on the other hand, in the absence of an isolated organism, saw this as a likely combined spinal-epidural complication. Infectious disease experts eventually diagnosed community-acquired meningococcal meningitis by analysing bacterial deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) fragments using polymerase chain reaction studies. This test and the management of suspected
meningitis
in the post-partum period are discussed.
...
PMID:Meningococcal meningitis after combined spinal-epidural analgesia. 1532 82
Ziconotide is a novel peptide that blocks the entry of calcium into neuronal N-type voltage-sensitive calcium channels, preventing the conduction of nerve signals. N-type calcium channels are present in the superficial laminae of the dorsal horn of the spinal cord. In various animal models of pain, intrathecal administration of ziconotide blocked nerve transmission and nociception. The United States Food and Drug Administration recently approved ziconotide intrathecal infusion for the management of severe chronic pain in patients who require intrathecal therapy and who are intolerant of or refractory to other treatment, such as systemic analgesics, adjunctive therapies, or intrathecal morphine. The drug has a narrow therapeutic window and a lag time for the onset and offset of
analgesia
and adverse events. In early clinical trials, frequent and severe psychiatric and central nervous system adverse effects were associated with rapid intrathecal infusion (0.4 microg/hr) and frequent up-titration (every 12 hrs). Therefore, patients with psychiatric symptoms are not candidates for this drug. Drug trials of external intrathecal catheters and microinfusion devices demonstrated a 3% risk of
meningitis
. A low initial infusion rate of 0.1 microg/hour and limiting infusion rate increases to 2-3 times/week are now recommended. Patients responsive to intrathecal ziconotide require an implanted infusion system to receive long-term therapy.
...
PMID:Ziconotide, an intrathecally administered N-type calcium channel antagonist for the treatment of chronic pain. 1620 99
The tunneled epidural catheter as an administration access for opiates has been used since the beginning of 1980. Patients with chronic pain, who does not get relief with medication through other accesses are benefited with infusion of opiate associated to a local anesthetic through epidural access. However, there are still doubts on the efficacy of the method in the handling and, consequently, over the risk for infection and other complications. As nursing is fundamental to make effective the relieve pain treatment, this study proposes to demonstrate how to keep safe the technique. Twenty-seven patients with chronic pain using epidural catheter for 18 days were followed between 2002 and 2004. Catheters were implanted in thoracic or lumbar level. No complications like epidural abscess,
meningitis
our epidural haematoma were observed. Patients' satisfaction related to
analgesia
was evident.
...
PMID:[Infection incidence in patients with tunneled peridural catheter]. 1633 78
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