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Medical Care Output and Productivity [PDF]

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Mark B. McClellan, Paul Heidenreich
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Perioperative Use of Intravenous Lidocaine

Drugs, 2018
Lidocaine is an amide local anaesthetic initially used intravenously as an antiarrhythmic agent. At some point it was proposed that intravenous lidocaine (IVL) had an analgesic effect that could be potentially beneficial in perioperative settings. Since these preliminary reports, a large body of evidence confirmed that IVL had anti-inflammatory and ...
Marc Beaussier   +4 more
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Intravenous lidocaine infusion

Revista Española de Anestesiología y Reanimación (English Edition), 2018
Systemic lidocaine used in continuous infusion during the peri-operative period has analgesic, anti-hyperalgesic, as well as anti-inflammatory properties. This makes it capable of reducing the use of opioids and inhalational anaesthetics, and the early return of bowel function, and patient hospital stay.
G, Soto, M, Naranjo González, F, Calero
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Bronchospasm After Intravenous Lidocaine

Anesthesia & Analgesia, 2008
IV lidocaine (1.5 mg/kg) administered to facilitate endotracheal intubation was associated with transient bronchospasm in a 17-month-old-female with mild intermittent asthma. Immediately after lidocaine administration, the patient developed diffuse bilateral expiratory wheezes and dramatic increases in peak inspiratory pressure.
Bobby R, Burches, David O, Warner
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Intravenous lidocaine

Best Practice & Research Clinical Anaesthesiology, 2017
Lidocaine has analgesic effect and antihyperalgesic and anti-inflammatory properties, which enable its use as a general anesthetic adjuvant. Lidocaine can reduce nociception and/or cardiovascular responses to surgical stress, postoperative pain, and/or analgesic requirements. However, its mechanisms of action remain unclear, despite its different known
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Regional Anesthesia with Intravenous Lidocaine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1963
The ability to induce regional total anesthesia with a safe intravenous agent would represent an advance in the management of many problems concerning the extremities. Intravenous anesthesia with local agents has been recognized since the original work of Bier1in 1908, but in spite of occasional reports in the literature it has not received general ...
H M, BELL, E M, SLATER, W H, HARRIS
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SEVERE HICCUPS AND INTRAVENOUS LIDOCAINE

Acta Clinica Belgica, 2007
We report the case of a patient in whom the use of intravenous Lidocaine to treat incapacitating hiccups was a success. Intravenous lidocaine should be considered as an alternative treatment for severe hiccups when classical medications are ineffective or produce side effects.
C, Boulouffe, D, Vanpee
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