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)

Renin activity and aldosterone concentration in plasma and excretion of sodium and potassium in urine were measured during a period of 24 hours in 12 patients undergoing hysterectomy under general anaesthesia or epidural analgesia. Analgesia extended from T4 to S5 and was effective throughout the study. The normal stress-induced increase in plasma renin activity and aldosterone was inhibited by epidural analgesia. Urinary excretion of potassium was significantly lower in the epidural group, but sodium and water retention showed no difference between groups. It is concluded that neurogenic stimuli from the surgical area are important release mechanisms of the renin-aldosterone response to surgery. The results suggest that post-operative sodium retention is caused by factors other than the mineralocorticoid system.
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PMID:Epidural analgesia inhibits the renin and aldosterone response to surgery. 48 83

Pain threshold elevations induced in rats following acute exposure to stressful cold-water swims and to inescapable foot shocks are significantly attenuated by hypophysectomy. The present study investigated the effects of hypophysectomy upon the dose-dependent and time-dependent analgesia induced by morphine and by the glucoprivic agents, 2-deoxy-D-glucose (2-DG) and insulin. Two reflex pain tests, the tail-pinch and the flinch-jump were employed. In normal rats, insulin induced prolonged (180 min) analgesia at doses of 16 U/kg on the tail-pinch test and 256 U/kg on the flinch-jump test. However, the same agents induced small and brief pain threshold elevations in hypophysectomized animals. By contrast, though 2-DG increased both measures in both groups, its effects were more marked in hypophysectomized rats. Hypophysectomized rats also exhibited a potentiated analgesic effect on both tests following high doses of morphine. On the other hand, low doses of morphine transiently increased tail-pinch thresholds in normal, but not hypophysectomized subjects. These data provide further evidence of multiple pain-inhibitory mechanisms in which the pituitary plays a complex, but integral part.
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PMID:Differential effects of hypophysectomy upon analgesia induced by two glucoprivic stressors and morphine. 50 10

Parenteral administration of naltrexone to water-deprived female rats suppressed water intake when injected 4, but not 12 hours prior to the drinking session. Intraperitoneal injection 5 mg/kg naltrexone twice daily or oral self-administration of naltrexone in doses sufficient to block morphine-induced analgesia failed to reduce water intake or to alter body weight in non-deprived animals. These findings suggest that the suppressant effects of naltrexone on appetitive behavior are mediated by a different population of opiate receptors than those mediating morphine-induced analgesia.
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PMID:Suppressant effects of naltrexone on water intake in rats. 52 96

By means of experiments involving pin-pricking, compositions containing 10% ketocaine base in a mixture of 2-propanol, glycerol and water were found to produce a high frequency of block to cutaneous pain following application to volunteers under an occlusive dressing. The local analgesic efficacy was found to be directly related to the degree of saturation of ketocaine in the vehicle and time of application. The degree of hyperaemia observed in the treated skin areas was found to be related to the degree of local analgesia produced.
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PMID:Local effects produced on intact skin by epicutaneously applied anaesthetic formulations. An experimental study in man. 58 20

delta9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (delta9-THC) and eight other synthetic analogues were found to induce a dose-related increase in heart rate in the conscious Wistar rat. Ina comparison of tachycardia with analgesic activity (mouse hot-plate and antiwrithing tests) it was found that the water-soluble ester derivatives of 2a, 1-hydroxy-3-(3-methyl-2-octyl)-6,6,9-trimethyl-7,8,9,10-tetrahydro-6H-dibenzo(b,d)pyran (DMHP), had the least potency for tachycardia and the greatest potency for analgesia. These findings suggest that these compounds may have promise as therapeutic agents.
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PMID:Drugs derived from cannabinoids. 7. Tachycardia and analgesia structure-activity relationships in delta9-tetrahydrocannabinol and some synthetic analogues. 69 Oct 6

Animals exposed to cold-water swims, rotation, inescapable shocks, abrupt food deprivation and other stressors display temporary analgesia. Since repeated exposures result in adaptation of this analgesia in much the same way that repeated administration of opiates results in tolerance, the possibility of cross-tolerance between cold-water stress-induced and morphine-induced analgesia was investigated. Flinch-jump thresholds were determined in ten experimental groups of six rats each. Three groups showed dose-dependent analgesia following single injections of morphine at 5, 10 and 15 mg/kg, respectively. A fourth group, subjected to a single cold-water swim at 2 degrees C for 3.5 min, displayed analgesia comparable to that produced by 10 mg/kg of morphine. Groups subjected either to 14 daily cold-water swims or to 14 daily morphine injections at 10 mg/kg showed normal thresholds on the 14th day indicating that adaptation and tolerance had developed, respectively. The cross-over groups were exposed to either 13 days of could-water swims followed by morphine or the reverse arrangement. Both groups showed profound analgesia instead of cross-tolerance, suggesting that a non-opiate neural mechanism may mediate stress-induced analgesia.
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PMID:Stress-produced analgesia and morphine-produced analgesia: lack of cross-tolerance. 69 49

Animals exposed to cold-water swims, rotation, or inexcapable shocks, display analgesia comparable to that of 10 mg/kg of morphine. The present study investigated whether a narcotic antagonist would eliminate analgesia induced by cold-water swims. In one group of 12 rats, naloxone at 0, 1, 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg was administered at weekly intervals immediately preceding forced cold-water swims (2 degrees C for 3.5 min) and alterations in flinch-jump thresholds were determined 30 min thereafter. In a second group of six rats, the effects of the same dose range of naloxone were determined upon normal flinch-jump thresholds. Naloxone dose-dependently attenuated the cold-water swim-induced analgesia up to a maximal reduction of 50% at 20 mg/kg. In contrast, all doses of naloxone had no effects upon normal flinch-jump thresholds. Since low doses of naloxone completely abolish morphine-induced analgesia, the present data suggest that the analgesia induced by stress is not identical to that of opiates.
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PMID:Dose-dependent reductions by naloxone of analgesia induced by cold-water stress. 69 50

Ketamine, currently being evaluated as an obstetric anaesthetic agent, is said to provide analgesia without depression of the protective airway reflexes or depression of the respiratory or cardiovascular systems. We have studied the effects of ketamine on the uterine blood flow, the foetus and the newborn in five monkeys (Macaca nemistrina). Uterine blood flow, (UBF) was measured by the steady-state infusion technique using tritiated water as the indicator. All of the variables were measured during a control period and again at 10 and 90 min after the administration of ketamine in doses of 2 mg/kg in three monkeys or 1 mg/kg in two. Maternal respiration was maintained at normal physiological levels without significant variation. The maternal mean arterial pressure (MAP), cardiac output (CO), and stroke volume (SV) did not change significantly, but heart rate (HR) did increase significantly following the injection of ketamine and remained increased for the duration of the study. UBF, a-v oxygen difference, and the oxygen consumption of the uterus and its contents remained stable throughout. During the intrauterine period the foetus did not seem to be affected by the two doses of ketamine. However, the three newborn monkeys delivered of the mothers who had reveived ketamine 2 mg/kg had profound respiratory depression. This was not seen in the two infants delivered from mothers receiving 1 mg/kg. Others have shown that neonatal depression is dose- and time-related. We conclude that ketamine should be administered to obstetric patients in small single doses or by continuous infusion in very low concentrations.
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PMID:Respiratory depression in newborn monkeys at Caesarean section following ketamine administration. 81 Dec 35

On a no treatment trial, a group of 24 oriental subjects rated cold pressor pain as significantly more painful and distressing than did a group of 24 occidental subjects. For half of the Orientals and half of the Occidentals, a second trial was conducted after acupuncture analgesia had been induced. The remaining 12 Orientals and 12 Occidentals served as no treatment controls on trial 2. Regardless of racial group, there was no difference between the pain of those experimental subjects who received acupuncture and the pain of those controls who did not. As they had on trial 1, Orientals reported significantly more pain and distress in response to ice water on trial 2. It is concluded that: (1) if acupuncture does work better for the Chinese than for other racial groups, the likely cause is a more refined patient selection procedure rather than an inherent difference in response to acupuncture; (2) evidence does not support the stereotyped view of Orientals as stoical in the face of physical pain.
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PMID:Response to cold pressor pain and to acupuncture analgesia in Oriental and Occidental subjects. 92 80

1. Stimulation of the upper respiratory tract with water releases reflex respiratory arrest and very marked bradycardia due to conduction and impulse generation disturbances in the heart accompanied by ventricular hyperexcitability. 2. Asphyxia causes bradycardia as a result of an inhibition of sinus node and the development of vicarious rhythms with excessive ectopic ventricular excitability. The intensity and duration of bradycardia during asphyxia are less than during water stimulation of airways. 3. Urethane anaesthesia did not prevent the development of the above described changes appearing during stimulation of the upper airways while topical analgesia with lidocaine completely prevented their appearance. The observations seem to suggest that for safety, surgical treatment in the upper airways should be done under analgesia of the respiratory mucosa. 4. The mechanism of the development of these changes seems to depend mainly on nervous and humoral factors, although the influence of other factors cannot be excluded. 5. Reflex changes in the action of the heart caused by water stimulation of the upper airways may be one of important components of the complex physiopathological process leading to death in drowning persons.
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PMID:The influence of upper respiratory tract receptors stimulation on the respiration and heart action in rats. 97 Jun 26


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