Publications by authors named "Bellville J"

Quazepam is a new benzodiazepine that may provide good hypnotic action with negligible effect on motor coordination or respiration. Sleep laboratory studies on human volunteers have shown quazepam 15 mg to be an effective hypnotic dose, with the 30-mg dose being optimal. At these doses, there was no deterioration of motor performance, and the drug, when given nightly for two weeks, continued to exert hypnotic effects without serious adverse effects.

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This study investigates the correspondence between results of the ventilatory response to CO2 obtained using the technique of dynamic end-tidal CO2 forcing (DEF) and results obtained using the technique of artificial brain stem perfusion (ABP). The DEF technique separates the dynamic ventilatory response into a slow and fast component with gains g1 and g2 as well as the extrapolated CO2 tension at zero ventilation (Bk). The ABP technique results in steady-state central (Sc) and peripheral (Sp) chemoreflex gains and extrapolated CO2 tension at zero ventilation (B).

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This study assessed the effect of low-dose intravenous dopamine (3 micrograms X kg-1 X min-1) on the hypercapnic ventilatory response in humans. Six normal healthy subjects were studied. By manipulating the inspired carbon dioxide concentration, the end-tidal carbon dioxide tension was raised in a stepwise fashion from 41 to 49 Torr and held at this level for 4 min.

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To define precisely the effects of dopamine on hypoxic ventilatory drive, two sets of experiments were performed in five healthy subjects. End-tidal CO2 was held constant in all experiments. First, a dopamine infusion (3 microgram/kg/min) was started in subjects already rendered hypoxic, causing an average sustained decrease in ventilation to 60% of the preinfusion ventilation.

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The effects of 2 doses of nefopam, d-amphetamine, pentazocine, and placebo were studied in healthy male sleep-deprived volunteers to determine whether the drugs improved or impaired coordination and whether they induced subjective effects. A critical tracking task was used to study hand-eye coordination. D-amphetamine, 10 mg orally, significantly improved tracking performance and made subjects feel better able to perform tasks but more anxious.

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The respiratory effects of dezocine and pentazocine were studied in five volunteers. Based on their effects over a 3-hour period, it was found that dezocine was 8.6 times as potent as pentazocine in terms of their respiratory depressant effects.

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Steplike end-tidal hypoxic drives (PETCO2 = 53 Torr) lasting for 5 min were generated in a group of normal subjects and a group of carotid body-resected subjects when end-tidal CO2 was maintained constant under eucapnic (PETCO2 = 39 Torr) and hypercapnic (PETCO2 = 49 Torr) conditions. The hypoxic ventilatory response of the normal subjects was prompt and significant in eucapnia and was enhanced in the hypercapnic state, evidencing CO2-O2 interaction. In contrast, the carotid body-resected subjects did not respond to eucapnic hypoxia but did demonstrate a small but significant ventilatory response to hypoxia against the hypercapnic background.

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Lorazepam 2 and 4 mg alone and in combination with atropine 0.4 mg and hyoscine 0.4 mg were studied as i.

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Diazepam, 10 and 20 mg, and 2 and 4 mg lorazepam were studied as intravenous surgical premedicants in 120 patients. Relief of anxiety, sedation, patient acceptance, lack of recall, and side effects were the variables evaluated. Both diazepam and lorazepam proved to be excellent surgical premedicants.

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Power-spectrum analysis of the electroencephalogram and inhaled-exhaled concentrations of halothane (when used), nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide of 36 patients during surgical operations under general anesthesia were monitored. Electroencephalographic arousal reactions were detected in 24 patients and these were accompanied by irregular respirations in nine patients. Cardiac arrhythmias occurred following an arousal reaction in eight patients.

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Two hundred seventy patients received morphine 5 mg or 10 mg alone or with promethazine 6.25 mg, 12.5 mg, or 25 mg.

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Morphine 5 mg and 10 mg and meperidine 50 mg and 100 mg were studied as intravenous surgical premedicants in 160 patients. Relief of anxiety, sedation, lack of recall and side effects were the variables evaluated. Neither morphine nor meperidine proved to be particularly good surgical premedicants.

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Diazepam and hydroxyzine as i.v. surgical premedicants were compared.

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Intravenous diazepam was administered to 4 groups of 35 patients as a surgical premedicant, double blind and according to a randomized sequence. Four dosages were used: 2.5, 5, 10, and 20 mg.

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This paper describes an amplifier and linearizer for the Beckman LB-1 carbon dioxide analyzer head. All electronics are solid state and DC regulated in contrast to the original LB-1 amplifier which was of vacuum tube design and AC regulated largely by means of a voltage stabilizer transformer. A new detection principle is adopted which reduces drift due to mechanical imperfections of the chopper motor (e.

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The respiratory depressant effect of marijuana was studied by means of carbon dioxide respiratory response curves in eight healthy male subjects participating in a study of the effects of a 90-day ad libitum intoxication to marijuana. Subjects were studied in the morning after refraining from marijuana use since the previous evening. Respiratory response curves were done before smoking and at 15, 30 and 60 minutes after smoking two 900-mg cigarettes containing 2.

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