Drugs
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Review Comparative Study
Guidelines for the use of propafenone in treating supraventricular arrhythmias.
Propafenone is a sodium channel blocking agent with a mild beta- and calcium channel-blocking activity. Several controlled and noncomparative studies have documented its efficacy in a variety of supraventricular arrhythmias in both adults and children. Propafenone is comparable with other Vaughan-William class I antiarrhythmic drugs for acute conversion of atrial fibrillation. ⋯ However, this has not been confirmed in clinical studies. In conclusion, propafenone appears to be effective in the management of a wide spectrum of supraventricular arrhythmias. It should be considered among the first line drugs for management of these arrhythmias in patients without structural heart disease.
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Wilson's disease is an inherited disorder of copper accumulation. The basic defect is a failure of excretion of excess copper in the bile by the liver for loss in the stool. The accumulating copper causes damage primarily to the liver and the brain. ⋯ Trientine gives a strong, fast, negative copper balance, and zinc induces hepatic metallothionein, which sequesters hepatic copper. For the initial treatment of patients presenting with neurological disease we use an experimental drug, tetrathiomolybdate, which provides rapid, safe control of copper. These latter patients are at great risk of serious permanent neurological worsening with penicillamine, and zinc is too slow-acting, in our judgment, to be optimal.
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Butorphanol is a synthetic opioid agonist-antagonist analgesic with a pharmacological and therapeutic profile that has been well established since its launch as a parenteral formulation in 1978. The introduction of a transnasal formulation of butorphanol represents a new and noninvasive presentation of an analgesic for moderate to severe pain. This route of administration bypasses the gastrointestinal tract, and this is an advantage for a drug such as butorphanol that undergoes significant first-pass metabolism after oral administration. ⋯ Tolerability of transnasal butorphanol parallels that of the injectable form, with somnolence, dizziness, nausea and/or vomiting reported most frequently. Thus, transnasal butorphanol is a novel formulation of an established analgesic which appears suitable for the short term treatment of moderate to severe pain, especially in an ambulatory setting. Transnasal butorphanol is likely to provide an alternative to oral opioid analgesics, particularly in the presence of nausea or vomiting, or to parenteral opioids when the oral route of administration is not appropriate.
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Patients undergoing cardiac surgery with cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB) experience transient haemostatic defects as a result of adverse changes to their blood components, blood cells and specific coagulation proteins. Aprotinin is a naturally occurring serine protease inhibitor isolated from bovine lung tissue which inhibits kallikrein and plasmin. A high dose aprotinin regimen (aprotinin 280mg loading dose over 20 to 30 minutes after anaesthesia induction followed by 70 mg/h for the duration of the operation and 280mg added to the priming fluid of the CPB circuit) has been used during CPB in order to reduce perioperative bleeding. ⋯ Mildly elevated plasma creatinine levels are more commonly observed in aprotinin-treated patients; these changes are transient in the majority of patients. Both high dose and low dose aprotinin regimens (280mg added to CPB pump prime fluid or 50% of the high dose regimen) have reduced blood loss and transfusion requirements in patients undergoing primary and repeat cardiac surgery. The role of aprotinin in paediatric cardiac surgery needs further clarification, while well-designed studies comparing aprotinin with other agents which inhibit fibrinolysis are also awaited with interest.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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Hypertension is a common and potentially serious complication of human pregnancy. It can be a marker of underlying maternal disease processes aggravated by pregnancy, or it can be directly related to the pregnancy (pre-eclampsia). It is associated with increased risks of fetal growth retardation and, if severe, can cause both maternal and fetal problems. ⋯ Maternal hypertension should be controlled with agents considered to be well tolerated in pregnancy. Following the index pregnancy, all patients with early and/or severe hypertension should be investigated for an underlying cause. Provided that there is clinical resolution of acute pregnancy-related hypertension, investigations are usually postponed until at least 3 months following delivery.