Results 191 to 200 of about 97,085 (246)
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JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1969
Patients frequently relate a history suggesting allergy to local anesthetic drugs which have been commonly recognized as causing dermatitis and systemic reactions. 1 However, there appears to be a wide discrepancy between the actual incidence and the emphasis placed on them by textbooks and lectures.
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Patients frequently relate a history suggesting allergy to local anesthetic drugs which have been commonly recognized as causing dermatitis and systemic reactions. 1 However, there appears to be a wide discrepancy between the actual incidence and the emphasis placed on them by textbooks and lectures.
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Local Anesthetics: Eutectic Mixture of Local Anesthetics
1991All commonly available local anesthetics have poor skin penetration when applied topically. One of the main reasons is that a local anesthetic agent needs to be in its cationic form in order to block nerve conduction. But it is the uncharged base which penetrates and diffuses into the tissues after topical administration.
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Archives of Dermatology, 1957
Received for publication May 21, 1957. There are a large number of agents that are used for local anesthesia by injection. Most of them I have found have one or more objections. The most commonly used ones are procaine hydrochloride, lidocaine (Xylocaine), and hexylcaine (Cyclaine). All are used in strengths of 1% to 2%.
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Received for publication May 21, 1957. There are a large number of agents that are used for local anesthesia by injection. Most of them I have found have one or more objections. The most commonly used ones are procaine hydrochloride, lidocaine (Xylocaine), and hexylcaine (Cyclaine). All are used in strengths of 1% to 2%.
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Reactions to Local Anesthetics
JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1966Local anesthetics are used widely by practically all physicians, most of whom are not fully aware of the lethal potential of local anesthetics and the swiftness with which they may precipitate a catastrophe. The perineural concentration of a local anesthetic necessary to interrupt conduction in a nerve fiber is many times greater than that which a ...
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Local Anesthetic Toxicity in the Geriatric Population
Drugs & Aging, 2019R. Waldinger, G. Weinberg, M. Gitman
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Local Anesthetic Systemic Toxicity: A Review of Recent Case Reports and Registries
Regional anesthesia and pain medicine, 2017M. Gitman, M. Barrington
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Spread of local anesthetic solution in the erector spinae plane block.
Journal of clinical anesthesia, 2018H. Ueshima, O. Hiroshi
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