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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cordotomy should be
reserved
for patients with intractable pain resistant to conservative treatment that is not of a dysaesthetic type. The high cervical percutaneous technique permits exploitation of the principles of stereotactic surgery, especially physiological localization of the lesion site. The induction by 100 Hz stimulation of a warm or cool tingling in some portion of the contralateral half of the body without muscle tetanization ensures location within the spinothalamic tract while attention to the somatotopographic organization of the responses permits a certain degree of tailoring of the extent of
analgesia
to the patient's needs. During 264 consecutive procedures the spinothalamic tract was successfully located in 99% with a 0.3% incidence of significant persistent paresis.
...
PMID:Percutaneous cervical cordotomy. 14 48
In 60%-90% of cases head injury is a part of multisystem trauma and of very decisive importance for the post-traumatic prognosis. Hypoxia, hypercarbia, and hypotension increase the primary lesion and cause secondary brain damage. Therefore, emergency measures must be directed to the essentials of sustaining vital functions, i.e. intubation/ventilation/oxygenation and stabilization of the circulatory system. All trauma-specific measures should avoid additional increases in intracranial pressure or should decrease it if already elevated. Moderate hyperventilation not only causes cerebral vasoconstriction with a concomitant decrease in intracranial blood volume and intracranial pressure, but also partly restores the disturbed cerebral autoregulation, and is therefore an important part of the emergency care and anesthetic procedure in patients with severe head injuries. It is supplemented by
analgesia
and sedation to prevent intracranial pressure increases due to painful external stimuli. Elevation of the head and upper part of the body by 30 degrees causes a decrease in intracranial pressure by decreasing intracranial blood volume due to improved venous return from the brain; however, this measure is to be applied only in stable circulatory conditions. The head should be put in mid-position avoiding sideways rotation, flexion, and hyperextension. Osmotically active agents are only indicated in emergency situations when there are signs of clinical deterioration. High-dose barbiturate therapy is
reserved
as a "last resort", under intensive care conditions, for controlling an otherwise intractable intracranial pressure rise. Calcium antagonists have no indication in this context. Anesthesia in patients with severe head injury must involve only those techniques that do not further increase an already elevated intracranial pressure. As inhalational anesthetics, including nitrous oxide, elevate the intracranial pressure to varying extents due to cerebral vasodilation with a concomitant rise in intracranial blood volume, these substances have to be avoided whenever raised intracranial pressure cannot be excluded. Narcotics, benzodiazepines, small dosages of barbiturates, and long-lasting muscle relaxants can be regarded as useful.
...
PMID:[Pathophysiologic principles, emergency medical aspects and anesthesiologic measures in severe brain trauma]. 331 Jul 24
Inbred mouse lines selectively bred for divergent levels of swim induced
analgesia
were differed in the ability to escape electric footshock. Mice displaying a high
analgesia
on a hot plate, after swimming for 3 min at 20 degrees centigrade terminated electric current applied at ascending intensity to the grid floor at a higher value compared to the low
analgesia
line. The difference was particularly pronounced after swim stress, when mice of the former line manifested a serious escape deficit by failing to terminate electric current elikiting apparently aversive phenomena, such as vocalization, runing and jumping. This escape deficit was
reserved
by naloxone, an opioid antagonist. Results are interpreted in terms of an assumed amnesic effect of endogenous peptides released under the conditions of swim stress. Such interpretation is justified by the data indicating a greater opioid involvement in the swim
analgesia
in the high
analgesia
line, compared to low
analgesia
mice, in which non-opioid mechanisms prevail.
...
PMID:Difference in escaping electric footshock by genetic mouse lines selectively bred for divergent levels of swim-induced analgesia. 340 47
In a 30-month period, 261 of 557 (46.8%) patients underwent a trial of labor. Of these, 215 patients (82.4%) achieved vaginal delivery. The major controversial issues regarding vaginal delivery in patients with a prior cesarean section are oxytocin administration, the inclusion of patients with recurring indications, and the use of epidural
analgesia
. Oxytocin was not used in this study. When our results were compared to those of others who used oxytocin liberally we found that oxytocin augmentation was not a major factor in increasing significantly the success and vaginal delivery rate. We believe that oxytocin usage should be
reserved
for selected patients with well-defined indications. When the primary cesarean section was for cephalopelvic disproportion, 66.6% delivered vaginally. This success rate justifies the inclusion of these patients in a trial of labor. Epidural
analgesia
proved to be a safe and efficient procedure. There was no maternal or perinatal mortality related to trial of labor.
...
PMID:Trial of labor without oxytocin in patients with a previous cesarean section. 356 82
Rib fractures and flail chest could be fatal if gas exchange is impaired. Efficient pain relief with continuous thoracic epidural
analgesia
allows a good physiotherapy management without central sedation and impairment of cough reflex, this prevents pulmonary atelectasis and infection. Eighteen patients/19 were treated with success in spite of flail chest, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and minor pulmonary contusion. Intermittent positive pressure ventilation must be
reserved
to severe pulmonary contusion and other crushing injuries of the chest as bronchial or great vessels ruptures.
...
PMID:Thoracic epidural analgesia in the treatment of rib fractures. 651 37
Two groups of 20 patients each were given immediately after hip-operation an epidural injection of 0,15 or 0,3 mg buprenorphine. Effects and side effects are compared with those observed in two groups of patients having the same type of operation, and given either 4 mg of morphine or saline (placebo) by epidural injection. Buprenorphine in both doses produced a shorter duration of
analgesia
than 4 mg of morphine. In no case did respiratory depression occur. Urinary retention after buprenorphine was barely more frequent than in the placebo group. Nausea and vomiting occurred in 35-45% of patients. We do not see an advantage in replacing morphine by buprenorphine for epidural opiate-
analgesia
, because the same high rate of nausea/vomiting is associated with a significantly shorter duration of
analgesia
after buprenorphine. We are convinced that epidural opiate-
analgesia
is most valuable for postoperative pain relief but should be
reserved
for selected cases.
...
PMID:[Epidural buprenorphine for postoperative analgesia after hip operations]. 661 22
Vasopressin produced
analgesia
in mice as estimated by using abdominal constriction tests (ED50 8.5 micrograms/kg i.v.) or hot plate method (ED50 63 micrograms/kg i.v.). However, vasopressin (10 micrograms/kg i.v.) produced no depression of locomotor activity in mice. Vasotocin had slight analgesic action; oxytocin or norepinephrine had none and there was no direct correlation between pressor response and
analgesia
. The analgesic action was nonopiate in nature as it was uninfluenced by the narcotic antagonist naltrexone at 5 to 15 mg/kg, but it was
reserved
by a vasopressin antagonist. Intraventricular administration of vasopressin (1-10 micrograms/kg) to mice produced no significant
analgesia
, suggesting a primarily peripheral locus of analgesic action. Vasopressin may play a role as an endogeneous pain regulating substance.
...
PMID:Characterization of vasopressin analgesia. 705 94
In 32 patients subjected to total hip replacement, postoperative pain relief was achieved by random treatment with either 5 mg of morphine in 10 ml of saline (n = 15) or 6-8 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine with epinephrine (n = 17), both drugs administered by the lumbar epidural route. In an additional group of 10 patients, post-traumatic thoracic or post-operative abdominal pain was relieved first by 4-6 ml of 0.5% bupivacaine with epinephrine and subsequently by 5 mg of morphine in 10 ml of saline, both drugs being administered by the thoracic epidural route. The duration of
analgesia
was significantly longer, on average, with morphine (28 h) than with bupivacaine (4.3 h) when the drugs were given by the lumbar route. Thoracic administration of morphine also resulted in a significantly longer duration of pain relief (on average 9.8 h) than that of bupivacaine (3.8 h). Morphine gave satisfactory pain relief in all cases. It was not associated with motor block, loss of sensitivity to temperature, touch, or pin-prick, or any signs of sympathetic block, as was the case with epidural bupivacaine. Plasma concentrations of morphine were not detectable 8 h after injection, though the patients still had pain relief. One case of delayed severe respiratory depression occurred 6 h after morphine injection via the thoracic route. Epidural morphine
analgesia
should therefore be
reserved
for patients in whom continual surveillance is possible, at least until more is known about the pharmacokinetics of narcotics in the epidural and subarachnoid space.
...
PMID:A comparison of epidural morphine and epidural bupivacaine for postoperative pain relief. 734 Mar 77
Giving a definition of
analgesia
in ICU needs to answer several questions: Why sedation? Which drugs can we use? How can we deal with sedation? (monitoring, continuous administration, weaning...)? Two different types of sedation must be considered: treatment-sedation (status epilepticus, tetanus, intracranial hypertension...) and comfort-sedation in anxious and/or restless and/or painful patients and in those necessitating mechanical ventilation. Analgesic consumptions vary widely with diseases and their outcome, background diseases and ICU environment. Several studies have shown that pain and
analgesia
are frequently neglected in ICU. The authors review the different drugs in use, with their advantages and drawbacks. A particular place is
reserved
to regional techniques, often underused in ICU. Indications are then fully discussed, according to several specific pathological conditions. Monitoring and weaning of sedation are also discussed at the end of the review.
...
PMID:[Role of analgesia for sedation in intensive care medicine]. 776 33
Some practices and procedures that are common during the management of childbirth lack proof of efficacy, and some have adverse effects. The practice of withholding food and liquids and using intravenous fluids during labor may pose risks such as fluid overload, and maternal and fetal hyperglycemia. Enemas should be
reserved
for women with painful constipation. Evidence does not support the value of shaving the perineal area. Nonpharmacologic measures to control pain during labor are safe and moderately effective. Pharmacologic methods of
analgesia
and anesthesia provide good pain relief but pose significant risks. Continuous electronic fetal monitoring should be considered a diagnostic procedure, not a screening procedure. Amniotomy may shorten labor but can result in abnormally high uterine forces, infection, umbilical cord prolapse and fetal laceration. Position changes and alternative birth positions promote greater comfort and efficiency during labor. Finally, episiotomy has not been shown to reduce severe lacerations or prevent pelvic relaxation, and use of this procedure should be limited.
...
PMID:The rational management of labor. 811 11
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