http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
이두익 대한통증학회 2004 The Korean Journal of Pain Vol.17 No.2
According to the current International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP) definition of neuropathic pain, these disorders are characterized by lesions or dysfunction of the nervous system that, under normal conditions, transmit noxious information to the central nervous system. Neuropathic pain can be divided into a disease with demonstrable neural lesions in the peripheral and central nervous system and conditions with no tangible lesion of major nerves. The differential diagnosis of painful neuropathies is traditionally based on the anatomical distribution and presumed etiology of the neuropathy, but more recently a symptom-based classification has been added. In theory, neuropathic pain should be easy to distinguish from other conditions, but in practice, are both difficult to identify and treat. The objective of this article was to review the problems relating to the classification and differential diagnosis of neuropathic pain for its better management.
Day Stay Anesthesia in Dentistry
이두익 대한치과마취과학회 2001 Journal of Dental Anesthesia and Pain Medicine Vol.1 No.1
There are multiple reasons for the shift in location of surgical procedures. Technical developments, including advances in surgical techniques, particularly with minimally invasive surgery and new anesthetic agents, have increased the types of cases that can be performed on an outpatient basis. Changing economic conditions and the increasing desire of patients to return home early have all altered the demand for ambulatory surgery. In the last decade, day stay anesthesia has been blessed with the introduction of several agents that have tremendously affected the quality of care we can provide to our patients. Those agents that have been most successful in their effect on our daily practice (enflurane, isoflurane,midazolam, propofol, and vecuronium) have provided some combination of following qualities to our patients: more rapid recovery, easy titration to individual patient's need, and fewer side effects.In today's health care environment, there is increasing pressure for improved efficiency, outcome, and safety in anesthetic practice. This article reviews an usefullness of each anesthetic agents for day stay anesthesia in dentistry, which include intravenous agents, inhalation agents, analgesic agents, muscle relaxants and premedicant drugs. There are multiple reasons for the shift in location of surgical procedures. Technical developments, including advances in surgical techniques, particularly with minimally invasive surgery and new anesthetic agents, have increased the types of cases that can be performed on an outpatient basis. Changing economic conditions and the increasing desire of patients to return home early have all altered the demand for ambulatory surgery. In the last decade, day stay anesthesia has been blessed with the introduction of several agents that have tremendously affected the quality of care we can provide to our patients. Those agents that have been most successful in their effect on our daily practice (enflurane, isoflurane,midazolam, propofol, and vecuronium) have provided some combination of following qualities to our patients: more rapid recovery, easy titration to individual patient's need, and fewer side effects.In today's health care environment, there is increasing pressure for improved efficiency, outcome, and safety in anesthetic practice. This article reviews an usefullness of each anesthetic agents for day stay anesthesia in dentistry, which include intravenous agents, inhalation agents, analgesic agents, muscle relaxants and premedicant drugs.