Cahiers d'anesthésiologie
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Review[Secondary effects of opioids administered by the regional route].
The administration of narcotics in the subarachnoid or the epidural space is gaining acceptance for postoperative pain relief. However, the potential side effects of intrathecal and epidural use of opioids are the following: early and late respiratory depression, pruritus, nausea and vomiting, urinary retention. ⋯ Naloxone can be used to reverse the depression. Pruritus can occur in 10 to 30% of patients receiving morphine; 10 to 30% nausea and vomiting, and urinary retention occurs in 20 to 50% of patients.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative Study Clinical Trial[A comparison of midazolam and diazepam in premedication using the intramuscular route].
A double blind study has been carried out on 60 women undergoing gynaecological surgery: they were divided into 2 groups who were given as premedication either midazolam: 10 mg, or diazepam: 15 mg intramuscularly. No significant differences between both groups concerning heart rate, blood pressure and respiratory rate were found. After 30 min sedation of anxiety was noted in 30 subjects (100%) after midazolam and in 20 subjects (67%) after diazepam (P less than 0.001). ⋯ Amnesia of the immediate postoperative period was 100% in both groups. Midazolam as compared with diazepam can be regarded as a superior intramuscular premedicant. This superiority can been explained by a rapid and good resorption.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[The effect of alfentanil on pain caused by the injection of propofol during anesthesia induction in children].
Three modes of administration of alfentanil were assessed in order to reduce pain on injection with propofol. Forty healthy children scheduled for ENT surgery were included in this double-blind randomized study. All patients received intrarectal premedication with midazolam and atropine. ⋯ The children experience pain when alfentanil was administered a few seconds before or just after propofol. An bolus injection reduced significantly discomfort in patients. Dosages of alfentanil in plasma might determine the right moment of propofol injection to obtain analgesia.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Review[Opioids by the perimedullary route: mechanisms of opioid analgesia].
The identification of multiple opioid receptors and opioid peptides in the 1970 was the starting point of an increasing knowledge on opioid physiology and pharmacology. The mechanisms of action of spinally supraspinal levels. At the spinal level, opioids act by a modulation of specific supraspinal effect is the consequence of the migration of opioids, other in the bloodstream or in the cerebrospinal fluid, towards the encephalon. ⋯ At the receptor level, opioid agonists act, hypothetically via the system of adenylcylase, more certainly via a modulation of membrane tonic channels. Thus, opioids modify sodium, calcium and potassium currents, and modify the successives phases of the membrane action potential. The result is an hyperpolarization which is responsible of an inhibition of the release of various neurotransmitters such as P substance.
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Cahiers d'anesthésiologie · Jan 1991
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical Trial[The amnesic effects of midazolam in premedication of children].
The aim of this study was to check local and general tolerance as well as anxiolytic and amnesic effects of midazolam intramuscular administration as a premedication in 4 to 10 years old children. A double blind, comparative study with a placebo was achieved, after drawing lots, in 40 children divided into two equal groups. ⋯ Also anterograde amnesia was found to be excellent: 17 children in the midazolam group did not remember a photograph shown after premedication, instead of only one in the placebo group. Anxiolytic effects, similar in both groups, cannot be considered owing to the too short interval of time from premedication to induction.