Med Clin (Barc)
November 2016
Selectivity is the property of a drug to preferentially bind to a biological structure. Most drugs can bind and stimulate or inhibit more than one system. Therefore, it is important that they are selective for the intended site and that the doses used do not have effects on other sites, which could provoke adverse reactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The altered hemodynamics, and therefore the arterial hypotension is the most prevalent adverse effect after subarachnoid anesthesia. The objective of the study was to determine the exact role of local anesthetic selection underlying spinal anesthesia-induced hypotension in the elderly patient. We conducted a descriptive, observational pilot study to assess the hemodynamic impact of subarachnoid anesthesia with isobaric levobupivacaine versus hyperbaric bupivacaine for hip fracture surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAntimuscarinics are the drugs of choice for the treatment of overactive bladder syndrome, and their benefit/risk ratio depends largely on selectivity for the different subtypes of muscarinic receptors. Solifenacin is the antimuscarinic that presents greatest selectivity for M3 bladder receptors, which may translate into a lower incidence of undesirable effects related to other receptor subtypes. Metabolic pathways of the antimuscarinics may impact efficacy and appearance of interactions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To describe the use of medicines and to determine the frequency of off-label use in emergency room paediatric patients.
Patients And Methods: A prospective, observational and descriptive study was carried out in the setting of the paediatric emergency room of a Spanish general hospital. Medicines used by children <14 years prior to their emergency room visit were analysed based on information collected from parents/guardians and relatives for each drug prescription.
A 5-year-old girl presented hypertension [24-h blood pressure (BP) average 135/80 mmHg, above the 99th BP percentile], as confirmed by ambulatory BP monitoring, following the use of a cold preparation (2.5 ml every 8 h for 4 days) containing phenyephrine (1 mg/ml). There was a clear relationship between the administration of the medication and hypertension, and between normalized BP values (24-h BP average 109/66 mmHg, 90th percentile) and the withdrawal of the medication.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA drug interaction is the quantitative or qualitative modification of the effect of a drug by the simultaneous or successive administration of a different one. The simultaneous administration of several medicines to the same patient can facilitates their appearance. It is difficult to determine their incidence, but it is related to the number of drugs administered simultaneously.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Physiol Pharmacol
June 2005
The aim of the present work is to investigate the effects of dopamine on isolated rat colon strips, and whether dopamine receptors are involved in these effects. Experiments on spontaneous motility and under potassium contraction were performed with dopamine and isoprenaline, both in the absence and presence of antagonists (distal colon strips, isotonic recording, Tyrode solution, 31 degrees C, 1 g of resting tension). At higher concentration (10(-4) mol/L), dopamine abolished spontaneous motility of the rat colon and this effect was not modified by antagonists.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA drug interaction is the quantitative or qualitative modification of the effect of a drug by the simultaneous or successive administration of a different one. Hypertensive patients, mainly the more elderly ones, frequently present concomitant diseases that require the administration of several medicines which facilitates the appearance of interactions. The lack of effectiveness of the antihypertensive treatment is a relatively frequent fact that sometimes is due to interactions of antihypertensive drugs with other treatments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: An important purpose of postmarketing surveillance of drugs is to better characterize the safety profile of drug therapy in the clinical setting. Another goal is to confirm the effectiveness of these drugs in patients who are candidates for antihypertensive therapy and who may have been excluded from Phase III studies. Irbesartan is a long-acting angiotensin II-receptor blocker specific for the angiotensin 1-receptor subtype that, in clinical trials in patients with hypertension, reduces blood pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCan J Physiol Pharmacol
December 2003
The aim of the study was to determine whether 24 h of cold storage of samples, mode of delivery, and gestational age influenced in vitro human chorionic vascular reactivity (35 arteries and 34 veins). The following groups were compared: (i) fresh versus 24-h cold-stored (4 degrees C in Krebs-Henseleit solution) chorionic vascular rings from normal term placentas, (ii) fresh chorionic vascular rings from normal term placentas obtained after vaginal delivery versus those obtained after elective caesarean section, and (iii) fresh chorionic vascular rings from normal term placentas versus those obtained from preterm deliveries. Isometric recording of the concentration-response curve to KCl (5-120 mM) was assessed in each group.
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