Results 301 to 310 of about 148,325 (342)
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Cimetidine and Lidocaine

Annals of Internal Medicine, 1983
Excerpt To the editor: Knapp and associates (1) indicate Cimetidine causes lidocaine serum concentrations to rise 75% in patients receiving a lidocaine infusion.
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Blood Concentration of Lidocaine after Spinal Anaesthesia Using Lidocaine and Lidocaine with Adrenaline

Acta Anaesthesiologica Scandinavica, 1981
In 32 patients undergoing spinal anaesthesia with lidocaine or lidocaine plus adrenaline, the concentration of lidocaine base was measured in repeated venous blood samples. Half of the patients were given 100 mg lidocaine alone and the other half 100 mg lidocaine with the addition of 0.2 mg adrenaline.
K. Axelsson, B. Widman
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Lidocaine and Seizures

Therapeutic Drug Monitoring, 2000
Lidocaine has a concentration-dependent effect on seizures. At lower concentrations it has anticonvulsant properties, whereas concentrations above 15 microg/mL frequently result in seizures in laboratory animals and man. Seizures induced by lidocaine in experimental conditions invariably start in the amygdala.
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Lidocaine test in neuralgia

Pain, 1992
Ten patients with organic nerve injury causing chronic neuropathic pain were tested for the effects of intravenous lidocaine versus saline upon psychophysical somatosensory variables. The variables assessed were the subjective magnitude of pain, area of mechanical hyperalgesia and presence and magnitude of thermal heat/cold hyperalgesia.
Claudio Marangoni   +5 more
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Concentrations of Lidocaine and Monoethylglycylxylidide (MEGX) in Lidocaine Associated Deaths

Journal of Forensic Sciences, 1985
Abstract Concentrations of lidocaine and MEGX were determined in a variety of tissues and other samples collected at autopsy. In 13 of the cases examined in which lidocaine was associated with death, tissue concentrations were greater than 15 mg/kg. Tissue concentrations in other patients treated with lidocaine were significantly lower.
Michael A. Peat   +4 more
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Mechanism of Lidocaine Release From Carbomer–Lidocaine hydrogels

Journal of Pharmaceutical Sciences, 2002
Rheology, acid-base behavior, and kinetics of lidocaine release of carbomer-lidocaine (C-L) hydrogels are reported. A series of (C-L)(x) (x = mol% of L = 25, 50, 75, 100) that covers a pH range between 5.33 and 7.96 was used. Concentrations of ion pair ([R-COO(-)LH(+)]) and free species (L) and (LH(+)) were determined by the selective extraction of (L)
Ruben H. Manzo   +2 more
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Pharmacokinetics of Lidocaine

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1977
To the Editor.— This letter refers to the article "Pharmacokinetic Approach to the Clinical Use of Lidocaine Intravenously" (236:273, 1976) by Greenblatt et al. I would like to call attention to a possible problem with the data on which they base their approach. Greenblatt and colleagues base their analysis on the data in an article by Rowland et al.
Lewis B. Sheiner   +2 more
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LIDOCAINE IN CARDIAC ARRHYTHMIAS

Survey of Anesthesiology, 1968
Sixty unanesthetized patients with 74 cardiac arrhythmias received lidocaine intravenously in an average dose of 1.5 mg/kg in 30 seconds. Suppression or termination of ventricular arrhythmias occurred in more than 80% of the 33 patients whether they had an acute myocardial infarction, were receiving digitalis, or were not receiving digitalis or ...
Lawrence A. Lubow   +3 more
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Fentanyl and lidocaine versus lidocaine for Bier block.

Regional anesthesia, 1992
The present study was designed to assess the efficacy of fentanyl combined with dilute lidocaine solution for intravenous regional anesthesia of the arm.In ten volunteers, the nondominant arm was exposed to three treatments: 100 mg lidocaine, 42 ml; 100 mg lidocaine plus 100 micrograms fentanyl, 42 ml; and 100 micrograms fentanyl, 42 ml.
Jeff M. Arthur   +3 more
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Extradural anaesthesia using lidocaine, ropivacaine, hyperbaric lidocaine and a combination of lidocaine and ropivacaine in mares

Veterinary Anaesthesia and Analgesia, 2000
Gynaecological surgery and obstetric manipulations in horses are usually performed under extradural anaesthesia. Lidocaine provides effective short duration anaesthesia, but may produce ataxia or recumbency. Ropivacaine has a longer duration of action and produces less motor block, in humans and dogs, when compared to lidocaine. This study investigated
F. J. Teixeira Neto   +3 more
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