Articles: chronic.
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Acta Anaesthesiol Scand · Oct 2014
Pain management following the Nuss procedure: a survey of practice and review.
Pectus excavatum is the most common congenital chest wall deformity. The Nuss procedure is frequently used for surgical correction and this technique has been associated with severe and prolonged post-operative pain. At the present time, the optimal analgesic strategy for managing patients following this procedure has not been determined. ⋯ Post-operative pain management following the Nuss procedure is variable and poorly characterized. Clinical trials or large observational registries comparing the safety and efficacy of primary modalities and long-term outcomes are needed to enable evidence-based decision-making for the management of these patients.
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Anesthesia and analgesia · Oct 2014
The Antihypersensitive and Anti-inflammatory Activities of a Benzofuranone Derivative in Different Experimental Models in Mice: The Importance of the Protein Kinase C Pathway.
Benzofuranone (BF1) was synthesized and its effects evaluated on mechanical hypersensitivity and paw edema models induced by different agents and on neuropathic pain induced by partial ligation of the sciatic nerve. An attempt was also made to elucidate the mechanism of action. ⋯ BF1 has dose-dependent antihypersensitive and antiinflammatory effects in both acute and chronic models of pain and inflammation, possibly mediated through interference with the PKC activation pathway. The easy and fast synthesis of this compound, low-cost, low-concentration-requirement, and once-daily-administration drug suggest it as a candidate for future clinical studies.
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Past disasters have highlighted the need to prepare for subsets of critically ill, medically fragile patients. These special patient populations require focused disaster planning that will address their medical needs throughout the event to prevent clinical deterioration. The suggestions in this article are important for all who are involved in large-scale disasters or pandemics with multiple critically ill or injured patients, including frontline clinicians, hospital administrators, and public health or government officials. ⋯ Chronically ill, technologically dependent, and complex critically ill patients present a unique challenge to preparing and implementing mass critical care. There are, however, unique opportunities to engage patients, primary physicians, advocacy groups, and professional organizations to lessen the impact of disaster on these special populations.