Anesthesiology
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
The interactions of midazolam and flumazenil on human memory and cognition.
Previous research has been unable to show unequivocally whether flumazenil can reverse completely, partially, or not at all the memory effects of benzodiazepines. The effects of midazolam on implicit memory are also unknown. The behavioral effects of flumazenil by itself, and the acute reversal of benzodiazepine effects, are also controversial. The current study was designed to investigate these questions. ⋯ Midazolam impairs explicit and implicit memory. Flumazenil reverses both the sedative and memory effects of the drug. Flumazenil, in the doses used, has no intrinsic actions.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Naloxone, meperidine, and shivering.
Meperidine, which binds both mu and kappa opioid receptors, is reportedly more effective in treating shivering than are equianalgesic doses of morphine (a nearly pure mu-receptor agonist). Furthermore, butorphanol, a kappa-receptor agonist/antagonist, treats shivering better than does fentanyl, which mostly binds mu receptors. These data indicate that much of meperidine's special antishivering activity may be mediated by its kappa activity. Accordingly, the authors tested the hypothesis that the antishivering activity of meperidine will be minimally impaired by low-dose naloxone (blocking most mu-receptors), but largely prevented by high-dose naloxone (blocking all mu and most kappa receptors). ⋯ These data indicate that the antishivering property of meperidine is not fully mediated by mu-receptors. Although meperidine has well-known nonopioid actions, stimulation of kappa receptors seems a likely alternative explanation for much of the drug's antishivering action.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Epidural clonidine treatment for refractory reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
Intraspinally administered alpha 2-adrenergic agonists may relieve pain in sympathetically maintained pain (SMP) syndromes, such as reflex sympathetically dystrophy (RSD), by spinal, peripheral, and central nervous system actions. This study examined analgesic efficacy and side effects of epidurally administered clonidine in patients with severe, refractory RSD. ⋯ Transdermal clonidine has been demonstrated to produce analgesia in the area surrounding its application site in patients with SMP. The current study indicates that extensive analgesia may be obtained by epidural administration. Sedation and hypotension may limit bolus epidural clonidine administration for RSD. The role for chronic epidural infusion of clonidine has not yet been established.
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Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial
Determinants of catecholamine and cortisol responses to lower extremity revascularization. The PIRAT Study Group.
Surgical trauma elicits diffuse changes in hormonal secretion and autonomic nervous system activity. Despite studies demonstrating modulation of the stress response by different anesthetic/analgesic regimens, little is known regarding the determinants of catecholamine and cortisol responses to surgery. ⋯ These data indicate that patient factors, such as age and inherent sympathetic responsivity, are important determinants of the catecholamine response to surgery. Modulation of the norepinephrine response by regional anesthesia/analgesia appears to be related, in part, to superior analgesia. The lack of correlation between catecholamine and cortisol secretion indicates that the stress response may consist of discrete systems responding to different stimuli.
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Comparative Study
Does the choice of local anesthetic affect the catecholamine response to stress during epidural anesthesia?
Previous work has established that 2-chloroprocaine epidural anesthesia has no effect on circulating plasma epinephrine concentrations in young, healthy, resting volunteers, and results in a decrease in norepinephrine concentration only when a level of analgesia to pinprick of C-8 is reached. The current study was performed to evaluate the possibility that this finding is unique to 2-chloroprocaine. ⋯ Epidural anesthesia with all three local anesthetic agents tested resulted in an incomplete sympathectomy in the resting state in healthy young men, judged by plasma catecholamine concentrations and cardiovascular variables minimally changed from resting baseline. Lidocaine epidural anesthesia did not attenuate the catecholamine response to CPT, indicating decreased blockade of sympathetic efferent neural traffic compared with bupivacaine and chloroprocaine epidural anesthesia.