Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Maternal plasma ACTH, cortisol and TSH concentrations were determined during the course of the induced labours of 20 normal parturients. Alternate mothers were given segmental epidural
analgesia
for pain relief during the first stage of labour. The remaining parturients served as controls. The ACTH level rose in same way in both groups, reaching its peak at the moment of delivery and decreasing rapidly thereafter.
Cortisol
secretion reached its maximum during the first stage of labour in the moment of delivery. After delivery the cortisol level decreased more rapidly in the epidural group tha. in the control gro,p. Umbilical venous cortisol concentration was the same in both groups. The maternal TSH level did not change significantly during labour in either group.
...
PMID:The effect of segmental epidural analgesia on maternal ACTH, cortisol and TSH during labour. 18 74
Plasma concentrations of glucose, insulin, glucagon, cortisol, growth hormone and prolactin were measured repeatedly in ten females undergoing abdominal hysterectomy during general anaesthesia. In addition to general anaesthesia five of the patients had continuous epidural
analgesia
effective for the first 26 postoperative hours. Plasma glucose was elevated during surgery and postoperatively, but not in patients having epidural
analgesia
. Insulin was low and unchanged in both groups. Glucagon was unchanged and similar in both groups.
Cortisol
was lower during surgery in the epidural group, but not postoperatively. Growth hormone increased during surgery in four of five patients receiving general anaesthesia alone, but no changes were observed in the epidural group. Prolactin was greatly elevated in all patients immediately after induction of anaesthesia and then fell rapidly during surgery, similarly in both groups. It is concluded that epidural
analgesia
can inhibit the hyperglycaemic response to surgical stress, but this effect cannot be uniformly correlated to changes in peripheral plasma levels of insulin, glucagon, cortisol, growth hormone or prolactin.
...
PMID:Effect of epidural analgesia on the glycoregulatory endocrine response to surgery. 126 58
Prolactin, ACTH, cortisol and HGH levels have been studied on 30 pregnant women in three different periods: during the labour, at the delivery and 24 hours later. They were divided into 3 groups depending on the
analgesia
: I) no
analgesia
(n = 10); II) psychoprophylaxis (n = 10), and III) extradural
analgesia
(n = 10). Prolactin levels increased during delivery and 24 hours later. A significant increase of ACTH levels (p less than 0.01) was observed during the delivery in the 3 groups even though they were under hasal values 24 hours later.
Cortisol
increased 38% (p less than 0.01) and 52% (p less than 0.02) in II and III groups, respectively during the delivery. No difference was found with HGH. Our results suggest that endocrine response modified by labour and delivery doesn't change with different
analgesia
techniques.
...
PMID:[Eutopic parturition: psychoprophylaxis or extradural analgesia. Influence on the endocrine response]. 255 43
There is growing experimental evidence that beta-endorphin immunoreactivity is raised by surgical stress in patients undergoing general anesthesia. As the assay methods employed to date did not allow to fully discriminate between beta-endorphin and its immediate precursor, beta-lipotropin, we have investigated in the present study plasma levels of these two peptides by separating them by chromatography on plasma extracts prior to radioimmunoassay in eighteen surgical patients under general anesthesia and eight under spinal anesthesia. Beta-lipotropin, but not beta-endorphin, plasma levels were found to be significantly elevated during surgery in the general anesthesia group, while no change was found in either peptide concentration in the spinal one.
Cortisol
plasma levels also increased significantly 90 minutes after the beginning of surgery, when they were positively correlated to beta-lipotropin ones. Although the sampling time we adopted may have prevented us from detecting an early peak of beta-endorphin during the first 30 minutes of surgery, the major component of the pituitary opioid response to surgical stress appears to be related to beta-lipotropin. This is in agreement with results of experimental work on various kinds of stress in animals and humans and seems to rule out a role for plasma beta-endorphin in post-operative
analgesia
.
...
PMID:Beta-lipotropin is the major component of the plasma opioid response to surgical stress in humans. 296 Aug 67
Twelve patients undergoing gastrectomy received combined epidural and splanchnic nerve blockade (Group E&S), and changes in plasma ACTH, cortisol, glucose and FFA were compared with those undergoing gastrectomy under general anaesthesia (Group G) or epidural
analgesia
alone (Group E). Plasma ACTH increased in all groups on the day of operation and was significantly higher in Group G than the other groups. Levels of ACTH in Group E&S were lower than Group E, but the differences were not significant.
Cortisol
response in Group G was most pronounced and prolonged. This cortisol response was significantly attenuated in Group E and was further inhibited in Group E&S. Blood glucose and FFA increased in Groups G and E during the operation but the increase was significantly less in Group E. In Group E&S, glucose and FFA concentrations showed practically no change throughout the study, being significantly lower than in Group E. The results indicated that the splanchnic nerve is responsible for producing endocrine-metabolic responses to gastric surgery even under epidural blockade.
...
PMID:Influences of splanchnic nerve blockade on endocrine-metabolic responses to upper abdominal surgery. 630 58
Paired maternal venous (MV) before (P1) and after (P2) general anesthesia, cord venous (CV) and cord arterial (CA) blood was taken from two groups of primagravid women, one delivered vaginally and the other by elective lower segment Caesarian section (ELSCS). ACTH,
Cortisol
(CoSol) Aldosterone (Aldo) Plasma Renin Activity (PRA) Plasma Renin Concentration (PRC) Angiotensin II (AII) Solium (N alpha) and Potassium [K]+ were measured in both study groups. Of the various hormones studied, all but cortisol were raised in the P2 sample with only ACTH and AII achieving significant increase. A number of significant positive correlations was found between P1 and P2 samples as well as between the hormones themselves. Four of the vaginally delivered group received epidural
analgesia
and demonstrated significantly higher levels of ACTH and CoSol in the CV sample. A comparison of the studied variables between the two groups showed a significant decrease in the ELSCS group of ACTH and CoSol in the MV sample, of ACTH, CoSol, PRC in the CV sample, and of CoSol in the CA sample. Of all the parameters, studied, only [K]+ together with Aldo was found to be elevated in the CV sample of the ELSCS group but only [K]+ achieved significant increase.
...
PMID:The effects of anesthesia and mode of delivery on the parameters of the renin-angiotensin system. 630 54
15 patients (12 women and 3 men) undergoing cholecystectomy were randomized into two groups. 8 patients were operated on under continuous thoracic epidural anaesthesia in combination with light general anaesthesia. Postoperatively they were kept painfree by continuous infusion of an 0.125% solution of bupivacaine via epidural catheter at a rate of 0.25-0.3 ml/kg X h over a period of four days. The 7 patients in the control group were operated on under neuroleptanalgesia. Piritramide was given for postoperative
analgesia
. All patients received 40 ml/kg X day of electrolyte solution during the period of investigation. Blood was collected at 8 am, 12 am, 4 pm, 8 pm, and 12 pm on the day of operation and on the third postoperative day, at 8 am on the first and second postoperative day, and at 8 am, 12 am, and 4 pm on the fourth postoperative day. Plasma glucose, ACTH, cortisol, T4, T3, and reverse T3 were measured. During the operation and for 12 h thereafter a mild hyperglycaemia was observed in the neuroleptanalgesia group but not in the epidural group. The differences were significant. A rise in ACTH was seen in both groups during and shortly after operation. The increase in cortisol concentration following this ACTH release was significant only in the neuroleptanalgesia, but not in the epidural group. From the first to the fourth postoperative day ACTH levels were low and cortisol concentrations within the normal range. On the third day it appeared that a diurnal variation in cortisol levels was again present.
Cortisol
suppression following the administration of 2 mg dexamethasone on the fourth postoperative day was detectable in both groups. Of the thyroid hormones, T4 remained unchanged and at a normal level during the investigation. T3 decreased and reverse T3 increased significantly, the maximum rise being observed on the second day. There were no differences between the groups. These changes are defined as low T3 syndrome, following caloric deprivation, injury, and stress. The metabolic and hormonal alterations caused by cholecystectomy are marked only during operation and shortly thereafter and only in this period are they influenced by epidural
analgesia
. From the first postoperative day onwards they are almost negligible so that a mitigation by using continuous epidural
analgesia
is not to be expected.
...
PMID:[Blood glucose, ACTH, cortisol, T4, T3 and rT3 after cholecystectomy. Comparative studies of continuous peridural anesthesia and neuroleptanalgesia]. 632 95
Existing evidence suggests that preoperative psychological preparation that is designed to reduce anxiety may sensitize cortisol and adrenaline responses to surgery. In a controlled trial of abdominal surgery patients, we therefore tested the effects of a preoperative preparation that used guided imagery, not to reduce anxiety, but to increase patients' feelings of being able to cope with surgical stress; 26 imagery patients were compared with 25 controls who received, instead, background information about the hospital. State-anxiety was similar in each group, but imagery patients experienced less postoperative pain than did the controls, were less distressed by it, felt that they coped with it better, and requested less
analgesia
. Hormone levels measured in peripheral venous blood did not differ on the afternoon of admission, before preparation.
Cortisol
levels were, however, lower in imagery patients than in controls immediately before and after surgery. Noradrenaline levels were greater on these occasions in imagery patients than controls. The results are interpreted in relation to two theories. One states that preoperative "worry" reduces surgical stress. The other concerns the influence of active and passive coping on endocrine responses to stress.
...
PMID:Preoperative rehearsal of active coping imagery influences subjective and hormonal responses to abdominal surgery. 779 76
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether the fetus mounts a hormonal stress response to a potentially painful procedure, intrauterine needling.
Cortisol
and beta-endorphin concentrations in fetal plasma obtained during uncomplicated fetal blood sampling or intrauterine transfusions by needling the fetal intra-abdominal portion of the umbilical vein (intrahepatic vein) were compared to hormone concentrations in fetal plasma obtained by the conventional technique of needling the placental cord insertion, which is not innervated.
Cortisol
and beta-endorphin concentrations did not increase within 10 minutes of fetal abdominal needling (n = 15). However, more prolonged needling during transfusion at the intrahepatic vein was associated with an increase in fetal plasma cortisol (median increase 48 nmol/L; 95% Cl, 23-86) and beta-endorphin (207 pg/mL; 113-307) concentrations compared to transfusion at the placental cord insertion (p < 0.005 for both hormones). The magnitude of rise in hormone increased linearly with the duration of needling (cortisol, r = 0.80; beta-endorphin, r = 0.88, p < 0.05 for both). These data suggest that the fetus mounts a hormonal stress response to invasive procedures. They raise the possibility that the human fetus feels pain in utero, and may benefit from anaesthesia or
analgesia
for invasive procedures.
...
PMID:Fetal plasma cortisol and beta-endorphin response to intrauterine needling. 791 81
The effects of
analgesia
on plasma beta-endorphin (beta-E), serum cortisol and blood glucose responses were investigated in 20 distressed, mechanically ventilated neonates during the first 3 days of life. Morphine 0.1 mg/kg, meperidine 1 mg/kg or alfentanil 10 micrograms/kg were used for
analgesia
as clinically indicated. Plasma beta-E, serum cortisol and blood glucose were recorded before
analgesia
and 1 and/or 2, 12 and 24 h afterwards in the distress group and once in 20 healthy neonates (control group). beta-E, cortisol, and blood glucose before
analgesia
were significantly higher in the distress group than in the control group.
Cortisol
values had decreased significantly 2 h after
analgesia
and blood glucose within 12 h. Plasma beta-E values had decreased to the same level as in the controls 24 h after the start of
analgesia
. The results indicate that the stress response in the distressed neonates with cardiorespiratory problems, as assessed by beta-E, cortisol, and blood glucose, is attenuated by opioid medication, and it is concluded that these patients should be given adequate
analgesia
.
...
PMID:Effect of opioid-induced analgesia on beta-endorphin, cortisol and glucose responses in neonates with cardiorespiratory problems. 828 62
1
2
3
Next >>