H. PaulScvO2 may be used by dialysis nurses to guide therapeutic interventions to avoid symptomatic hypotension in the outpatient setting. Further research is warranted to replicate these findings and broaden our understanding of strategies to mitigate hypotensive symptoms....
According to the predominant motor symptoms two subtypes have been described, characterized by either a hypokinetic-rigid parkinsonian syndrome (MSA-P) or a cerebellar syndrome (MSA-C). In both subtypes, autonomic dysfunction such as orthostatic hypotension, urinary incontinence or erectile dysfunction ...
Two of the three patients with HD reported improvement in chorea at higher dosages, one at 200 mg/day and one at 500 mg/day, with rebound of symptoms after discontinuation of the drug.37 Both patients, however, experienced significant adverse effects (somnolence, hypotension) that compromised...
Carvedilol has a more potent antihypertensive effect, while metoprolol succinate is better tolerated in patients with borderline hypotension but has more effect on heart rate. Bisoprolol appears to be the best tolerated beta blocker. Dosing, Heart Rate and Outcomes Several studies h...
Therefore, RBD could modify the extent of cardiac autonomic nerve denervation independently of motor symptoms. Accordingly, patients with iRBD often have orthostatic hypotension and cardiac dysfunction during wakefulness and sleep, with similar patterns observed in patients with PD and RBD compared with ...
However, the patient rapidly deteriorated with neurological disturbance, hypotension, and anuric renal failure two days prior to stem cell infusion. She was transferred to the pedi- atric intensive care for cardiovascular and respiratory sup- port and renal replacement therapy and received her stem ...
This can be partially explained by the many controversies surrounding phenobarbital, which is only effective in approximately half of the cases [88], causes electroclinical uncoupling and can have relevant adverse effects, such as hypotension, sedation and respiratory suppression [89] which might be ...
(diphenhydramine, 0.5 mg/kg) are indicated when wheezing is associated with increasedvagal toneor histamine release, respectively. The development of hypotension,urticaria, or flushing should lead to the consideration ofanaphylaxis. Corticosteroids (e.g., 2 mg/kg of IV hydrocortisone) should be ...
This can be partially explained by the many controversies surrounding phenobarbital, which is only effective in approximately half of the cases [88], causes electroclinical uncoupling and can have relevant adverse effects, such as hypotension, sedation and respiratory suppression [89] which might be ...
> Section > Chapter Müller, T.; Büttner, T.; Gholipour, A.Farshad.; Kuhn, W. Neuroscience Letters 341(3): 201-204 2003 ISSN/ISBN:0304-3940 12697283 10.1016/s0304-3940(03)00185-x 003682508 Full-Text Article emailed within 0-6 h ...