Results 181 to 190 of about 18,654 (227)
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Intrathecal Morphine for Postoperative Pain Relief
Asia-Oceania Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 1984SummaryWe injected 0.1 to 3 mg of morphine and atropine morphine added to 0.3% dibucaine solution into the lumbar subarachnoid space of 101 patients for supplementary intraoperative anesthesia and postoperative analgesia. Pain relief occurred within 20 to 40 minutes after injection and lasted 6 to 59 hours, with a mean duration of 25 hours, in 65 ...
H J, Huang, T, Ishimaru, T, Yamabe
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Chronic intrathecal morphine for intractable pain
Journal of Neurosurgery, 1987✓ Forty-three patients with intractable pain received intrathecal morphine delivered by implanted continuous-infusion (Infusaid) or programmable (Medtronic) devices. In 35 patients the pain was due to cancer, and eight patients had chronic nonmalignant pain.
R D, Penn, J A, Paice
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Pharmacokinetic Aspects of Intrathecal Morphine Analgesia
Anesthesiology, 1984Fifteen patients undergoing thoracotomy were given 0.25 or 0.50 mg morphine intrathecally (L2-L3 or L3-L4) for an analgetic and pharmacokinetic study. Administration of morphine at the end of the operation resulted in a highly variable duration of analgesia ranging from 1-20.5 and 1-40 h for the 0.25 and 0.50 mg groups, respectively.
G, Nordberg +3 more
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Intrathecal morphine for chronic benign pain
Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology, 2003In the treatment of chronic benign pain, the administration of an intrathecal opioid produces a potent analgesia without interfering with the motor and sensory functions of the lower extremities. An intrathecal opioid should be considered only when pain control with conventional oral and systemic administration is inadequate or is associated with ...
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Intrathecal Morphine for Postoperative Pain Relief
Regional Anesthesia: The Journal of Neural Blockade in Obstetrics, Surgery, & Pain Control, 1980A study was performed on a group of inguinal herniorrhaphy patients comparing postoperative analgesia of spinal anesthetics with spinal anesthetics plus intrathecal morphine. Those patients receiving intrathecal morphine obtained significant pain relief as compared with the control group.
W. Nelson, J. Katz
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Teaching Family Members Intrathecal Morphine Administration
Journal of Neuroscience Nursing, 1986Pain caused by cancer in the pelvis and sacrum is difficult to control using standard methods. Systemic narcotics are frequently ineffective in providing relief of pain despite constant sedation. Cancer patients can undergo placement of a subarachnoid catheter attached to a subcutaneous reservoir, which allows one to three daily injections of ...
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Intrathecal morphine in aortic aneurysm surgery
Anaesthesia, 1987Summary The purpose of this study was to compare the peri‐operative conditions produced by intrathecal morphine with those that result from conventional analgesia in aortic aneurysm surgery. Low‐dose intrathecal morphine provides a level of analgesia during operation indistinguishable from that of moderate doses of parenteral opiate ...
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