Results 261 to 270 of about 60,888 (302)
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INTRATHECAL AND EPIDURAL ANALGESIA

Critical Care Clinics, 1999
Centroneuraxis analgesia has a place in the management of critically ill patients. With the safety of the intrathecally placed microcatheter now in question, epidural blockade is more suitable in the intensive care unit setting. The different mechanisms of action and the resultant synergy of local anesthetic agents and opioids, as well as their ...
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Epidural Hydromorphone for Postcesarean Analgesia

Obstetric Anesthesia Digest, 1985
The efficacy of epidurally administered hydromorphone for postcesarean analgesia was evaluated in a prospective, randomized, double-blind study. Patients in group H (N = 26) received 1.0 mg of hydromorphone in preservative-free saline (total volume = 10 mL), administered epidurally.
D H, Chestnut, W W, Choi, T J, Isbell
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Epidural Opioid Analgesia

Critical Care Clinics, 1990
Epidural opioid analgesia has become an important therapeutic technique in the management of acute pain and has been demonstrated to be superior or equal to other parenteral opioid techniques (intramuscular, intravenous, PCA) with less associated sedation and significantly smaller doses of drugs.
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Epidural analgesia

American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, 2001
M P, O'Connell, S W, Lindow
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Epidural abscess following epidural analgesia

Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, 2000
J P, Rathmell   +2 more
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Epidural Analgesia—The Jury Is In

Annals of Surgery, 2014
Balachundhar, Subramaniam   +1 more
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Epidural analgesia in labor: A narrative review

International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics, 2022
Lucy Halliday   +2 more
exaly  

Enoxaparin and Epidural Analgesia

Anesthesiology, 1996
S R, Weitz, V, Chan
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