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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Natural killer (NK) cell activity and the endocrine response during and after parietal cell vagotomy were studied in two groups of patients receiving either epidural
analgesia
extending from S5 to Th4 + general anaesthesia (Group I), or general anaesthesia (Group II). NK cell activity of unseparated mononuclear cells in peripheral blood was measured against K-562 target cells in a 51Cr-release assay. NK cell activity increased in the same way in both groups in relation to premedication, anaesthesia and surgery (P less than 0.01). Postoperatively, the activity fell significantly on the first day (P less than 0.01), but returned to preoperative levels on day 3 (Group I) and day 5 (Group II). The endocrine response measured, except for adrenaline and
prolactin
, differed between Group I and II. In Group I, plasma noradrenaline and serum cortisol increased insignificantly throughout the observed period--compared to the preoperative level--whereas a significant increase in both hormones was found in Group II during surgery and in the postoperative period. A significant increase in plasma adrenaline and serum
prolactin
was found in both groups during anaesthesia and surgery. The findings indicate that NK cell activity during upper abdominal surgery is modified in almost the same way during two different anaesthetic techniques, one of which partly seemed to block the endocrine surgical stress response. The fluctuations in NK cell activity were not correlated to the changes measured in hormone concentrations.
...
PMID:Natural killer cell activity in patients undergoing upper abdominal surgery: relationship to the endocrine stress response. 652 81
A series of analogues and shorter homologues of dermorphin (DM), a frog skin heptapeptide with potent morphine-like activity, have been assayed in the rat after subcutaneous (SC) administration at the screening dose of 4 mg/kg. The effects taken into account are:
analgesia
(tail-pinch test), stimulation of
prolactin
(
PRL
) secretion, and inhibition of gastro-intestinal (GI) motility (charcoal meal transit). Effective doses were calculated for the most active compounds. The potency of DM (H-Tyr-D-Ala-Phe-Gly-Tyr-Pro-Ser-NH2) in the different tests was: tail-pinch: ED50 = 0.83 mg/kg;
PRL
release: ED100 = 0.3 mg/kg; inhibition of GI motility: ED30 = 1.8 mg/kg.
...
PMID:Antinociceptive, prolactin releasing and intestinal motility inhibiting activities of dermorphin and analogues after subcutaneous administration in the rat. 664 21
The analgesic effect of
prolactin
(
PRL
) was tested by means of the acetic acid-induced writhing test and the hot plate method. In both assays
PRL
produced dose-dependent
analgesia
. This was antagonised by naltrexone indicating the involvement of opiate mechanisms. Bromocriptine, which inhibits
PRL
secretion through dopaminergic activity, also antagonised
PRL
-induced
analgesia
implicating dopaminergic mechanisms in this action of
PRL
. It is suggested that pituitary peptides may have a role in pain modulation along with the endogenous opioid peptides.
...
PMID:Analgesic effect of prolactin: possible mechanism of action. 666 95
The
prolactin
, LH, FSH, growth hormone and cortisol responses to surgical stress were studied in female patients receiving halothane (general) anaesthesia or epidural
analgesia
. Plasma cortisol,
prolactin
, and growth hormone concentrations increased during surgery, and post-operatively in patients operated under general anaesthesia, but not in patients operated during epidural
analgesia
. Gonadotrophin concentrations were unchanged in the general anaesthesia group until 9 h after stimulation when levels decreased slightly. In contrast plasma gonadotrophin levels decreased immediately after the administration of epidural
analgesia
and during the following 9 h. It is concluded that neurogenic blockade inhibits the anterior pituitary response to surgical stress.
...
PMID:Prolactin, LH, FSH, GH and cortisol response to surgery and the effect of epidural analgesia. 677 46
Stereotactic instillation of absolute alcohol into the sella turcica for pituitary destruction was carried out in 29 patients divided into two groups. Seventeen with prostatic carcinoma underwent a total of 19 injections with 94% good to excellent results that persisted throughout the remainder of the patient's life-span. The longest survival was 9 months. Brief relapses did occur, but spontaneous remissions were the rule. A second group of mixed cancers contained 12 patients who received a total of 13 injections. Eleven patients had good to excellent results that persisted in all but 1 patient. The longest survival was 7 months. Hormonal levels and
prolactin
stimulation tests failed to show any correlation between hormonal changes and pain relief. Naloxone reversal of
analgesia
did not occur. There was no loss of cognitive function shown on psychological testing. Pathological studies showed destruction of the pituitary gland, which was subtotal in some patients despite good pain relief. All examinations showed that the pituitary stalk was destroyed. Patients who survived longer also showed degeneration of the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus and the median eminence. All but 1 patient with pain relief exhibited a lack of antidiuretic hormone (ADH) production. Interpretation of the data indicates that ADH or its associated neurophysins act as central pain transmitters. The production of these transmitters is decreased or abolished by chemical hypophysectomy through the destruction of hypothalamic nuclei.
...
PMID:Treatment of pain of diffuse metastatic cancer by stereotactic chemical hypophysectomy: long term results and observations on mechanism of action. 699 70
Maternal plasma
prolactin
(
PRL
) concentrations were determined during the course of induced labours in 18 normal parturients. Every second mother was given segmental epidural
analgesia
for pain relief during the first stage of labour and the remaining parturients served as controls. The maternal
PRL
level declined during labour in both groups, which contrasts with the increased output seen in nonpregnant patients subjected to stress. The lowest levels were reached during the first stage of labour. The reduction in
PRL
levels was statistically significant in the control group but not in the epidural group of patients.
...
PMID:The effect of segmental epidural analgesia on maternal prolactin during labour. 738 28
The most important factors in the evaluation and treatment of breast pain consist of a thorough history, physical, and radiologic evaluation. These can be used to reassure the patient that she does not have breast cancer. In the 15% of mastalgia patients who have life-altering pain and still request treatment, therapy may consist of a well-fitting bra, a decrease in dietary fat intake, and discontinuance of oral contraceptives or hormone replacement therapy. Those women still resistant to therapy may experience relief from evening primrose oil supplements, bromocriptine, tamoxifen, or GnRH analogues. Predicting which treatment will be most useful for any particular woman may be challenging. No differences in success rates were found to be associated with factors such as reproductive history, presenting complaint, personal or family history of breast disease, or subsequent need for breast surgery. The peak (but not basal) serum
prolactin
levels in response to thyrotropin releasing hormone stimulus has been predictive of success for hormonal treatment but is relatively invasive. A survey of treatments actually used was obtained from 276 consultant surgeons in Britain in 1990. Of those, 75% prescribed danazol. Others used
analgesia
(21%), diuretics (18%), local excision (18%), bromocriptine (15%), evening primrose oil (13%), tamoxifen (9%), a well-fitting bra (3%), and no treatment (10%). Breast specialists were more likely to begin treatment with primrose oil, tamoxifen, vitamin B6, and
analgesia
, reserving other hormonal therapies for more difficult cases. To further evaluate the women who have severe mastalgia but do not complete treatment regimens, a questionnaire was sent to 79 patients who failed to return to the Longmore Breast Unit of Western General Hospital, Edinburgh. Seventy-one women responded. Of these, 36 said they felt better, 19 said they felt no more could be done, 18 learned to live with it, 14 were not worried even if the pain recurred, 2 were pregnant, 10 were postmenopausal, and 5 were still taking the medications previously prescribed. The prognosis for women with breast pain is not always predictable. Women with cyclic breast pain often are relieved by events that alter their hormonal milieu, whereas noncyclic breast pain may last only 1 to 2 years. Sitruk-Ware and colleagues conducted a study of French women with fibroadenomas. They found an association between fibroadenomas and cyclic mastalgia occurring more than 1 year prior to the first full-term pregnancy. A retrospective, case-control study to determine if cyclic mastalgia was a risk factor for breast cancer was conducted on 210 newly diagnosed women with breast cancer.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Mastodynia. 781 7
Plasma levels of beta-endorphin (beta-EP), met-enkephalin (met-ENK), ACTH, cortisol, and
prolactin
were measured in 20 patients who underwent extracorporeal gallstone lithotripsy (ESWL) before the treatment, at 500 shock waves (SW) (15-20 min), at 1000 SW (40-50 min), and 10 min after the end of ESWL. According to the Visual Analog Scale, nine patients had no pain, seven patients had pain from level 1 to 5, and four patients had pain from 5 to 10. No complications were observed. Plasma beta-EP values increased during the treatment, both in patients without pain and in those with pain. Only in the former group was the increase significant (baseline values (pmol/L): no pain = 4.04 +/- 1.3; pain 1-5 = 3.6 +/- 1.06; pain 5-10 = 2.9 +/- 0.5. Peak values: no pain = 6.6 +/- 1.2 (p < 0.005); pain 1-5 = 4.6 +/- 2.5; pain 5-10 = 4.5 +/- 2.2). Moreover, a negative correlation between beta-EP levels and individual pain scores during ESWL has been observed (CC = -0.64, p < 0.003). Plasma met-ENK levels reached the peak at 1000 SW and declined 10 min after the end of the treatment, although they were always higher than basal values (baseline values (pg/ml): no pain = 45 +/- 12; pain 1-5 = 38 +/- 10; pain 5-10 = 48 +/- 8. Peak values: no pain = 112 +/- 42 (p < 0.005), pain 1-5 = 114 +/- 48 (p < 0.005), pain 5-10 = 85 +/- 10 (p < 0.005). This behavior has been the same, regardless of the presence or absence of pain. We conclude that during ESWL, a rise of beta-EP and met-ENK occurs, and the increase of the former can be responsible for induction of
analgesia
because of its inverse correlation with pain intensity.
...
PMID:Plasma opioid levels during extracorporeal gallstone lithotripsy. 839 Dec 10
Previous studies have failed to demonstrate a block of the endocrine response to upper abdominal surgery by thoracic epidural
analgesia
. To clarify the bases for this failure, we compared the effects of epidural
analgesia
of different dermatome levels up to C8-T2 or C3-4. The patients who received general anesthesia alone showed significant increases of adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and arginine vasopressin (AVP) immediately after skin incision. The patients with C8-T2 blocked developed significant increases in these hormones, not after the skin incision, but after the intraabdominal procedure. Of the eight patients with C3-4 block, six developed no such responses throughout the study period. The responses of oxytocin (OXT) and
prolactin
(
PRL
) were more susceptible to epidural
analgesia
and were blocked at the C8-T2 level. Growth hormone (GH) showed no correlation with surgical procedures and epidural block. These findings indicate that the nociceptive neural information during upper abdominal surgery is conveyed by the sensory fibers included in both the thoracic and lumbar spinal nerves that innervate the abdominal wall and the intraabdominal viscera, and by the phrenic nerves that innervate the diaphragm. The rationale for postulating the involvement of the phrenic nerves can be referred to the embryonal descent of the diaphragm from the C3-5 myotomes that serves as the upper wall of the abdominal cavity.
...
PMID:The role of the phrenic nerves in stress response in upper abdominal surgery. 863 94
The objective demonstration of improved postoperative recovery suggests that the surgical injury response induced by the laparoscopic approach is less intensive than that after open surgery. Twenty-five patients diagnosed as having noncomplicated gallstones were studied prospectively. They were operated by laparoscopy (group I, n = 12) or open surgery (group II, n = 13).
Analgesia
requirements (p < 0.026) and postoperative stay (p < 0.001) were significantly less in group 1. Cholecystectomy performed by either technical options induced a significant increase over basal values of glucose, lactate, white blood cell count,
prolactin
, ACTH, cortisol, interleukin 6, C-reactive protein, and PCO2. Both surgical procedures induced a significant reduction of total proteins, albumin, prealbumin, free fatty acids hemoglobin, hematocrit, and pH. There were no differences between the levels of growth hormone, insulin, glucagon, or PO2 during any of the periods studied. Comparison of the results of the two cholecystectomy techniques showed that laparoscopic cholecystectomy induced a significantly less intensive acute-phase response (area under the curve) of interleukin 6 (17 +/- 17 versus 47 +/- 26 pg/ml x hr x 10(2); p < 0.003), C-reactive protein (16 +/- 12 versus 35 +/-16 mg/dl x hr x 10; p < 0.004), and prealbumin (16 +/- 2.7 versus 13.8 +/- 2.3 mg/dl x hr x 10(2); p < 0.05). The surgical injury response after laparoscopic cholecystectomy is similar to that after open cholecystectomy, but the aeute-phase response component is less intense. This finding may be a consequence of the reduced size of the operative wound with laparoscopic cholecystectomy.
...
PMID:Acute phase is the only significantly reduced component of the injury response after laparoscopic cholecystectomy. 866 26
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