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Romsing J.; Henneberg S. W.; Walther-Larsen S.; Kjeldsen C. 《British journal of anaesthesia》1999,82(4):637-638
We have evaluated the anaesthetic effect of tetracaine gel 1 g, applied for
45 min, compared with EMLA cream 2 g, applied for 60 min, in a randomized,
double-blind study in 60 children aged 3-15 yr. Venous cannulation was
performed 15 min after removal of the EMLA cream (n = 20) and tetracaine
gel (n = 20). Cannulation was performed up to 215 min after removal of the
tetracaine gel in another 20 patients. Significantly lower pain scores were
recorded by the children treated with tetracaine gel compared with EMLA
cream (P < 0.02). Forty to 45% of children in the tetracaine groups
reported no pain compared with only 10% in the EMLA group. Only minor
adverse effects were observed. We conclude that tetracaine gel provided
effective, rapid, long-lasting and safe local anaesthesia, and was
significantly better than EMLA cream in reducing pain during venous
cannulation in children using the recommended application periods for both
formulations.
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Intravenous dextromethorphan to human volunteers: relationship between pharmacokinetics and anti-hyperalgesic effect 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of dextromethorphan (DM) 0.5 mg/kg administered intravenously (i.v.) on hyperalgesia and pain after a tissue injury in human volunteers, and to describe the relationship between pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data. The heat-capsaicin sensitisation model, a well-established experimental hyperalgesia model was induced in 24 healthy, male volunteers aged 21-35 years. The subjects received i.v. DM 0.5 mg/kg or isotonic saline on two separate study sessions. The primary outcome measure from 0 to 3 h was reduction in area of established secondary hyperalgesia. Secondary outcome measures were reduction in area of secondary hyperalgesia in response to brief thermal stimulation, heat pain detection thresholds and painfulness after tonic heat pain. Blood samples were collected throughout the study to describe the relationship between pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic data. Intravenous DM 0.5 mg/kg significantly reduced areas of established secondary hyperalgesia with an average of 39% (P<0.05). Development of secondary hyperalgesia was substantially prevented by DM (P<0.05). No significant effect was seen on either heat pain detection thresholds or after tonic heat pain. The pharmacokinetic-pharmacodynamic relationship showed a large inter-subject variation with a mean delay in effect of nearly 2 h in relation to peak serum concentration. The results strongly indicate that DM is an anti-hyperalgesic drug. The delay in effect may be explained by several mechanisms and suggests that timing of DM administration is an essential factor for using the drug in clinical settings. 相似文献
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