Results 181 to 190 of about 97,085 (246)
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ABSORPTION OF LOCAL ANESTHETICS

Journal of the American Medical Association, 1958
Factors that determine the rate of absorption of a local anesthetic were studied in canine and, when possible, in human subjects. The drugs used were tetracaine, cocaine, procaine, and benzocaine. Objective data was obtained in the form of actual concentrations of each drug in the blood, and the concentrations obtained by intravenous injection were ...
D, CAMPBELL, J, ADRIANI
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A Pharmacological and Therapeutic Study of Benzyl Alcohol as a Local Anesthetic

Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 1918
1. Laboratory experiments with benzyl alcohol or phenmethylol show that it possesses powerful local anesthetic properties, on the one hand, and a very low toxicity as compared with other well-known local anesthetics on the other. 2. A series of clinical
D. I. Macht
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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 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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THE PHARMACOLOGY OF LOCAL ANESTHETICS

Anesthesiology Clinics of North America, 2000
The pharmacology of local anesthetics is an integration of the basic physiology of excitable cells and the mechanism by which local anesthetics are capable of interrupting conduction of neural messages. The common characteristics of the molecules with local anesthetic action have been identified and can explain the properties of the agents.
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Toxicity of Local Anesthetics

New England Journal of Medicine, 1976
Local anesthetics comprise one of the most widely used classes of drugs in medicine and dentistry, with their remarkable ability to block, quickly and reversibly, the traffic of impulses through both sensory and motor nerves. Historically, the demonstration of the general anesthetic properties of diethyl ether in 1846 antedated by 38 years Koller's ...
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Choosing a Local Anesthetic

Dermatologic Clinics, 1994
Although lidocaine alone will serve as an excellent anesthetic for most patients, using less painful injectable agents, topical anesthetics, and occasionally oral sedation will offer the frightened or pain-intolerant patient an acceptable and effective alternative system of local anesthesia.
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Narcotics and Local Anesthetics

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Equine Practice, 1993
The recognition and alleviation of animal pain is a growing veterinary and public concern. Pain can be of an acute or chronic nature with different behavioral manifestations. Physiologically, pain is a dynamic and complex phenomenon that produces changes in the central and autonomic nervous systems as well as in the endocrine system.
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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 in dentistry

Clinical Dentistry Reviewed, 2019
Since the advent of their use over a hundred years ago, local anesthetics have continued to shape the field of dentistry and its specialties by providing the means with which to accomplish a multitude of procedures in an office setting without the need for a general anesthetic. In oral and maxillofacial surgery, local anesthetics have the added benefit
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