The comparative amnestic effects of midazolam, propofol, thiopental, and fentanyl at equisedative concentrations.
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Pharmacodynamic considerations for moderate and deep sedationMultiple synaptic and membrane sites of anesthetic action in the CA1 region of rat hippocampal slicesHippocampal sharp wave-ripple: A cognitive biomarker for episodic memory and planningGeneral anesthesia and human brain connectivity.A review of the use of propofol for procedural sedation in the emergency department.At clinically relevant concentrations the anaesthetic/amnesic thiopental but not the anticonvulsant phenobarbital interferes with hippocampal sharp wave-ripple complexes.What about Memory, Consciousness, Recall, and Awareness in Anesthesia?Visual P2-N2 complex and arousal at the time of encoding predict the time domain characteristics of amnesia for multiple intravenous anesthetic drugs in humans.The effects of propofol, small-dose isoflurane, and nitrous oxide on cortical somatosensory evoked potential and bispectral index monitoring in adolescents undergoing spinal fusion.Information loss over time defines the memory defect of propofol: a comparative response with thiopental and dexmedetomidine.The effect-site concentration of propofol producing respiratory depression during spinal anesthesia.Low-dose propofol-induced amnesia is not due to a failure of encoding: left inferior prefrontal cortex is still active.Multiphasic modification of intrinsic functional connectivity of the rat brain during increasing levels of propofol.Propofol and midazolam inhibit conscious memory processes very soon after encoding: an event-related potential study of familiarity and recollection in volunteers.Comparison between Midazolam Used Alone and in Combination with Propofol for Sedation during Endoscopic Retrograde CholangiopancreatographySubhypnotic doses of propofol impair spatial memory retrieval in ratsAdverse drug reactions in dental practice.Sedation, analgesia, and delirium in the critically ill patient.The neuropharmacology of implicit learning.Conscious sedation and anesthesia in the cardiac electrophysiology laboratory.Memory formation during anaesthesia: plausibility of a neurophysiological basis.Analgesic and Sedative Effects of Dezocine and Midazolam During Vitrectomy.Randomized controlled trial of patient-controlled sedation for colonoscopy: Entonox vs modified patient-maintained target-controlled propofol.Inhibition of the MAPK/ERK cascade: a potential transcription-dependent mechanism for the amnesic effect of anesthetic propofol.Propofol sedation in children: sleep trumps amnesia.A comparison of equisedative infusions of propofol and midazolam for conscious sedation during spinal anesthesia - a prospective randomized study.Being awake intermittently during propofol-induced hypnosis: a study of BIS, explicit and implicit memory.Remifentanil sedation compared with propofol during regional anaesthesia.Nurse-administered propofol sedation without anesthesia specialists in 9152 endoscopic cases in an ambulatory surgery center.The effect of midazolam on conscious, controlled processing: evidence from the process-dissociation procedure.A partially blinded randomised controlled trial of patient-maintained propofol sedation and operator controlled midazolam sedation in third molar extractions.Requirements of propofol at different end-points without adjuvant and during two different steady infusions of remifentanil.Spatio-temporal dynamics of multimodal EEG-fNIRS signals in the loss and recovery of consciousness under sedation using midazolam and propofol.Individual indicators of appropriate hypnotic level during propofol anesthesia: highest alpha power and effect-site concentrations of propofol at loss of response.Feasibility of measuring memory response to increasing dexmedetomidine sedation in children.Limitation in monitoring depth of anesthesia: a case report.Propofol and memory: a study using a process dissociation procedure and functional magnetic resonance imaging.The effect of sevoflurane anesthesia on cognitive function and the expression of Insulin-like Growth Factor-1 in CA1 region of hippocampus in old rats.The effect of sevoflurane on the expression of M1 acetylcholine receptor in the hippocampus and cognitive function of aged rats.Amnesia for electric dental pulp stimulation and picture recall test under different levels of propofol or midazolam sedation.
P2860
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P2860
The comparative amnestic effects of midazolam, propofol, thiopental, and fentanyl at equisedative concentrations.
description
1997 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
1997 թուականի Հոկտեմբերին հրատարակուած գիտական յօդուած
@hyw
1997 թվականի հոտեմբերին հրատարակված գիտական հոդված
@hy
1997年の論文
@ja
1997年論文
@yue
1997年論文
@zh-hant
1997年論文
@zh-hk
1997年論文
@zh-mo
1997年論文
@zh-tw
1997年论文
@wuu
name
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@ast
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@en
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@nl
type
label
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@ast
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@en
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@nl
prefLabel
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@ast
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@en
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@nl
P2093
P1433
P1476
The comparative amnestic effec ...... t equisedative concentrations.
@en
P2093
Feshchenko VA
Reinsel RA
Veselis RA
P304
P356
10.1097/00000542-199710000-00007
P407
P577
1997-10-01T00:00:00Z