J Gynecol Obstet Biol Reprod (Paris)
October 2007
Familial hypokalemic periodic paralysis (FHPP) is a rare inherited disease characterized by a dysfunction of the membrane ion channels. Clinical manifestations are attacks of hypokaliemia with flaccid muscle paralysis. Paralysis is sometimes severe but always reversible with symptomatic treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe placental transfer of three opioids used in peridural analgesia, fentanyl, alfentanil and sufentanil, and two reference substances, antipyrine and *H2O, was determined ex vivo in the human placental cotyledon system. (1) In the first set of experiments, the infusion rates were constant and fixed at physiological flow rates. Under these conditions, the magnitude of the materno-fetal transfer was in the following order: *H2O = antipyrine = fentanyl > alfentanil > sufentanil.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was designed to assess the effect of adrenaline on the plasma concentrations of fentanyl in mothers and umbilical vessels after epidural administration for caesarean section. Thirty patients undergoing elective caesarean section were allocated randomly into two groups. Group 1 (n = 16) received 100 microg fentanyl, 10 ml of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To establish the plasma evolution of prothrombin fragments 1+2 (F 1+2), thrombin-antithrombin III complexes (TAT), fibrin fragment D-Dimers (DD), von Willebrand factor antigen (vWf), Type 1 plasminogen activator inhibitor antigen (PAI) and blood platelet count during normal pregnancy and to compare these values with those obtained in hypertensive or pre-eclamptic pregnancies.
Design: Cross-sectional study.
Subjects: Forty-seven healthy pregnant women with gestational age ranging between 5 and 40 weeks, and fourteen women with gestational age ranging between 25 and 38 weeks presenting with either gestational hypertension (n = 4) or pre-eclampsia (n = 10).
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol
November 1991
The maternal and umbilical concentrations of fentanyl were measured after epidural analgesia for cesarean section, using a highly sensitive radioimmunoassay method. Sixteen parturients were anesthetized with a single epidural injection of a mixture of 85 mg bupivacaine 0.5%, 60 mg etidocaine 1%, and 100 micrograms fentanyl with epinephrine 1:200,000.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Pharmacol Ther
August 1990
The influence of pH variations on transplacental transfer of antipyrine was studied using a human placental cotyledon perfused ex vivo. The antipyrine transfer rate is positively correlated with the pH in the fetal circulation and negatively correlated with the pH in the maternal circulation. Thus, the transfer rate is negatively correlated with the difference between pH values in maternal and fetal circulations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Gynecol Obstet Biol Reprod (Paris)
May 1984
A randomised trial was carried out to evaluate the use of a mixture of fentanyl with marcaine in epidural analgesia. Two series of 30 patients each were studied: in the first only marcaine was given for the epidural and in the second marcaine and fentanyl mixed. Stronger and longer analgesia was obtained in the series where fentanyl was added showing that local anaesthetics can be potentiated by opiates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe perinatal effects of phenoperidine and of epidural anaesthesia were studied in a randomised trial in which only normal patients were studied. Foetal heart rate curves, pH, pCO2 and neonatal clinical behaviour demonstrated that both kinds of analgesia had no harmful effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnn Anesthesiol Fr
January 1978
Tracheo-bronchial intubation using a double-lumen Carlens tube provides the surgeon with a mediastinal operating field free of any obstruction by the lung and provides greater surgical ease than that of an assistant retracting a constantly invasive lung with tracheal intubation. This anaesthetic technique involving the ventilation of only one lung during the endothoracic period of the surgical procedure has not been used routinely for extra-pulmonary surgery since the shunt which is created leads to a fear of dangerous hypoxia. The aim of this study involving 30 patients is to demonstrate that the blood oxygen saturation obtained by the careful ventilation of a single lung, that of the side on which the patient is lying, is perfectly acceptable and comparable with the preoperative oxygen saturation of the subject at rest.
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