Results 201 to 210 of about 39,876 (256)
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Local anesthetics

Annals of Emergency Medicine, 1985
Local anesthetics are remarkably useful agents that enhance patient comfort and improve patient compliance. Their use, however, requires an understanding of their action, proper dosages, potential risks, and treatment of reactions. We have presented the history, pharmacokinetics, action, risks of using, and ways in which agents are used to treat the ...
R S, Altman   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Local Anesthetics

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Large Animal Practice, 1981
Local anesthetics are used in a wide range of clinical situations to prevent acute pain and to stop or ameliorate pain produced by cancer or pain associated with chronic painful conditions. Knowledge of the pharmacology of local anesthetics is essential for their safe use and selection of specific agents to achieve intended goals.Local anesthetics are ...
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LOCAL ANESTHETICS

Dental Clinics of North America, 1994
Local anesthetics have been especially important in establishing pain control as a fundamental accomplishment in clinical dentistry. When used conscientiously, local anesthetics are effective and safe. It is helpful for clinical dentists to understand the workings of these adjuncts. The more we understand them, the better we will be able to use them.
  +5 more sources

Local Anesthetic Facelift

Facial Plastic Surgery Clinics of North America, 2020
A thorough medical history is critical in patient selection for local anesthesia facelifting. Patients with no prior issues with dental procedures and no history of significant anxiety are better candidates. Simplifying local anesthesia mixtures and using dilute concentrations will minimize dosing errors and decrease risk of local anesthesia toxicity ...
Louis M, DeJoseph, Jason D, Pou
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Local Anesthetic Myotoxicity

Regional Anesthesia and Pain Medicine, 2004
Skeletal muscle toxicity is a rare and uncommon side effect of local anesthetic drugs. Intramuscular injections of these agents regularly result in reversible myonecrosis. The extent of muscle damage is dose dependent and worsens with serial or continuous administration. All local anesthetic agents that have been examined are myotoxic, whereby procaine
Wolfgang, Zink, Bernhard M, Graf
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New local anesthetics

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology, 2018
Local anesthetics are used for performing various regional anesthesia techniques to provide intraoperative anesthesia and analgesia, as well as for the treatment of acute and chronic pain. Older medications such as lidocaine and bupivacaine as well as newer ones such as mepivacaine and ropivacaine are being used successfully for decades.
Shah, Jarna   +2 more
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Local Anesthetics

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1992
Emergency physicians often rely on the use of local anesthetic agents to relieve patient discomfort, and research continues in an effort to develop new agents with improved anesthetic qualities. Eventually, a nontoxic, rapidly acting agent may become available that could provide profound anesthesia of long duration when applied topically to intact skin
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A new local anesthetic

The American Journal of Surgery, 1957
Abstract 1. 1. An outline of the pharmacology of propoxycaine HCI, a new local anesthetic, is presented. 2. 2. Seventy-one cases in which propoxycaine HCI was used as a local anesthetic are reviewed. 3. 3. Salient features of the satisfactory performance of propoxycaine HCI include: (a) rapid onset, (b) effective in small dosage, (c ...
J H, MITCHELL   +2 more
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Local Anesthetic Agents

Emergency Medicine Clinics of North America, 1988
The rational selection and safe use of local anesthetic solutions is of paramount importance to the practice of emergency medicine. Such decisions are based on a sound knowledge of the pharmacology and toxicity of those agents one uses clinically in day to day practice.
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Alkalinization of Local Anesthetics: Which Block, Which Local Anesthetic?

Regional Anesthesia: The Journal of Neural Blockade in Obstetrics, Surgery, & Pain Control, 1995
Background and Objectives. A number of clinical studies have been performed in an attempt to establish the effects of alkalinization on potency of local anesthetics. Conflicting results were obtained probably because different studies used different methods as well as different definitions of the effects.
G, Capogna   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

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