Reflex sympathetic dystrophy often presents with the subjective chief symptom of pain. This paper demonstrates that careful study of the subtle and often cyclical objective signs can be used to assess the state of the disease. It may also evaluate progress of treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Podiatr Med Assoc
November 1991
Diagnosis and follow-up treatment of reflex sympathetic dystrophy is difficult because of the subjective, nonspecific nature of its primary symptom, burning pain. Early diagnosis and aggressive treatment of reflex sympathetic dystrophy with epidural nerve blocks improves clinical resolution. Temperature difference between extremities and dependent cyanosis are reliable objective signs for clinical diagnosis and the evaluation of progress for treatment for reflex sympathetic dystrophy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe hypothesized that when the depth of ether anesthesia is increased from 2 to 5%, cerebral vessels dilate secondary to circulating catecholamine stimulation of cerebral metabolism. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) by 133Xe clearance and cerebral metabolic rate for oxygen (CMRO2) were measured on 2% and then 5% ether in air in two groups of seven monkeys each during mechanical ventilation. Propranolol, 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe determined, in monkeys, whether halothane-induced cerebrovascular dilation is mediated by beta-adrenergic receptors and whether cerebrovascular tone progressively returns to baseline values during prolonged halothane anesthesia. Total cerebral blood flow (CBF), cerebral perfusion pressure, plasma halothane concentration, and arterial blood gas tensions and pH were measured in 14 rhesus monkeys mechanically ventilated with 0.5% (inspired) halothane, 33% O2 and balance N2O.
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