To evaluate the long-term effectiveness of a single cervical epidural steroid injection (CESI) performed with or without morphine, 24 patients, without need of surgery, but suffering for more than 12 months from cervical radicular pain, were included in a prospective and randomised study. The cervical epidural space was injected (C7-D1; 18-ga needle) with an increasing volume (10 ml maximum) of isotonic saline solution to exacerbate the patient's radicular pain. The patients were then randomly allocated to 2 groups: the steroid group (group S, n = 14) received an equivalent volume of 0.5% lidocaine plus triamcinolone acetonide (10 mg/ml) and the steroid plus morphine group (group S + M, n = 10) received the same combination plus 2.5 mg of morphine sulphate. Pain relief was assessed as the percentage of pain decrease on a visual analogue scale on day 1 and at months 1, 3, 6, 8 and 12 after CESI, up to 48 months. Anthropometric data between the 2 groups were similar. The mean volume injected in the epidural space was: 6.6 +/- 2.1 and 6.3 +/- 1.9 ml in groups S and S + M, respectively, and this volume exacerbated pain in 21 of 24 patients. Despite observing a better transient improvement the day after CESI in the S + M group, long-term results did not differ. The success rate was 78.5% in group S and 80% in group S + M providing pain relief of 86.8 +/- 14.7% and 86.9 +/- 17.9%, respectively. Pain relief remained stable with time (mean follow-up: 43 +/- 18.1 months).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
To determine what consequences cognitive, behavioural or somatic impairments had on disabilities and recovery after a head injury (HI), a population-based sample of 231 adult patients was studied 5 years after an HI. Eighty lower-limb-injured (LLI) patients were considered as controls. Sixty-four LLI and 176 HI patients were reviewed (114 minor, 35 moderate, and 27 severe HI). Prevalence values of headaches (44-54%), dizziness (26-37%), and anxiety (47-63%) were not significantly different in the three HI severity groups, but were significantly lower in patients with an isolated limb injury (12-15%). Memory problems and depressive mood increased with injury severity. Mental impairments were frequent in severe HI patients (18-40% of patients). In minor and moderate HI patients, most disabilities were related to associated injuries. According to the Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS), recovery was not considered as good because of somatic, behavioural or cognitive complaints in 2.5%, 5.7% and 59.2% of surviving patients in each of the above HI groups. Somatic or behavioural complaints may have considerable consequences in some minor HI patients, and the long-term management of certain patients needs improvement because these impairments are misunderstood.
We demonstrate in this paper that bupivacaine, a local anesthetic, can act alone as an uncoupler of rat liver mitochondria.It stimulates state 4 respiration, induces a swelling in potassium acetate (in the presence of valinomycin), and collapses the transmembrane potential. Lidocaine, another local anesthetic, requires the presence of a lipophilic anion such as TPB-to produce the same effects. TPB-can also reinforce the action of bupivacaine. These differences in action of the two local anesthetics can be explained by the difference in their hposolubility.
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