Selective ANG II receptor blockade not only decreases blood pressure, but also shifts the baroreflex set-point for the initiation of counter-regulatory reflex responses of heart rate and blood pressure towards normal blood pressure levels. Thus, data suggest that ANG II plays a pathogenetic role in the elevation of the baroreflex set point in primary hypertensive subjects.
Hypnosis reduces intraoperative anxiety of oral and maxillofacial patients significantly. Further clinical studies on the use of hypnosis are considered useful.
The case reported represents a pattern of foreign body incorporation which is unusual based on review of the literature but characteristic for patients with borderline personality disorder. Diagnostics and therapy require an individual concept which only can be implemented in close co-operation with psychiatrists. Secondary clinical benefit derived from surgical diagnostics and therapy as well as the possibility of autoaggressive relapse have to be taken into consideration.
Medical hypnosis is not considered to be a substitute for conscious sedation or general anaesthesia but a therapeutic option equally interesting for anaesthesists and surgeons.
The Department of Maxillofacial Surgery of the University Hospital Schleswig-Holstein/Campus Lübeck offers intraoperative hypnosis since 2002. Besides clinical evaluation by controlled studies, patients attitudes should be included in the judgement on such adjuvant procedure not established in general.70 patients of the department treated under combined local anaesthesia/hypnosis rated their individual postoperative patient satisfaction by standardised questionnaires. A control group of equal size and demographic/surgical features consisted of patients that were treated without hypnosis in the same interval. Results of the inquiry indicate that intraoperative hypnosis increases significantly postoperative satisfaction of oral and maxillofacial patients. Satisfaction is attributed decisively on the adjuvant procedure.
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