Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (analgesia)
28,200 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The analgesic, hemodynamic and respiratory effects of buprenorphine (0.3 mg i.v.) were monitored in 15 coronary care unit-admitted patients presenting with myocardial infarction who were in functional class I according to the Killip classification. At the time of the study, 8 of them had unequivocal precordial pain (group 1); the remaining 7 were painfree (group 2). The agent showed a prompt and potent analgesic action. It also induced a slight decrease in mean aortic pressure associated with a reduction in systemic vascular resistance and an increase in cardiac index, a rise in the pulmonary arterial pressure and arteriolar resistance and right atrial pressure, a reduction in arterial pO2 and pH and an increase in pCO2. Tension-time-indices of the left and right ventricles varied in parallel with variations in aortic and pulmonary artery pressure, respectively. These responses were probably unrelated to analgesia since they were similar in groups 1 and 2. Changes in systemic circulation were such as to possibly decrease the contractile effort and the oxygen need of the left ventricle and the size of infarction. On the contrary, the rise in pulmonary arterial pressure imposes a hemodynamic burden on the right ventricle that, depending on the patient's condition, may assume clinical importance. It is felt that the use of buprenorphine in myocardial infarction should be restricted to uncomplicated and selected cases.
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PMID:Analgesic and hemodynamic effects of buprenorphine in acute infarction of the heart. 359 3

Many factors influence the outcome after surgery of the bowel. However, care in anaesthetic and postoperative management may help to reduce the frequency of complications. Such care can be directed at maintenance of or improvement in oxygen delivery to the bowel by the avoidance of hypoxia, hypocapnia and hypovolaemia, and by careful selection of drugs and techniques used during anaesthesia. Tension on anastomoses can be reduced by care in the administration of neostigmine, and possibly by the use of pethidine rather than morphine for analgesia during and after operation. Postoperative ileus may be affected by sedative and analgesic therapy.
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PMID:Anaesthesia and bowel surgery. 614 Sep 34

Midline ventral hernias are common. Tension-free mesh repair of ventral hernias is becoming popular due to the high recurrence rate with conventional techniques. We have used an open intraperitoneal technique using the Bard Ventralex hernia patch in midline ventral hernias (<or=3 cm). Fifty-one patients were treated (34 males and 17 females) with a mean age of 52.4 years (range 18-82). Forty-three patients were day cases. Operative times, analgesic use, overnight hospital stay and postoperative complications were recorded prospectively. The mean operative time was 30 min (range 10-68). Thirty-six patients required mild/moderate postoperative analgesia. Two patients had minor wound infections and one had seroma. There was one recurrence. Our early experience suggests that Ventralex hernia patch repair of small midline ventral hernias can be performed as a day case with minimal postoperative complications.
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PMID:Intraperitoneal tension-free repair of small midline ventral abdominal wall hernias with a Ventralex hernia patch: initial experience in 51 patients. 1693 46

Tension-free vaginal tape insertion is a recommended treatment for stress incontinence. There is evidence that intra-operative testing of continence by asking patients to cough may improve outcomes, but an optimal sedation regimen has not been determined. We prospectively evaluated the effectiveness of propofol and remifentanil infusions in 25 patients using pre- and post-sedation peak cough pressures and pain scores. Patient satisfaction was assessed using the Iowa Satisfaction with Anaesthesia Score (ISAS). Post-sedation cough pressures were improved compared to baseline, with a mean peak pressure increase of 24 mmHg (95% CI 15.5-32.5; p < 0.001). Pain scores (median, IQR [range]) were low for local anaesthetic infiltration (0, [0-1]) and first (0, [0-1]) and second (0, [0-3.5]) needle insertions. Of the 19 patients completing the ISAS, all felt safe and satisfied. Sedation using propofol and remifentanil provides acceptable analgesia, satisfaction and effective continence testing.
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PMID:An evaluation of conscious sedation using propofol and remifentanil for tension-free vaginal tape insertion. 1861 23