نتایج جستجو برای: phrenic nerve transfer

تعداد نتایج: 451958  

Journal: :Anesthesia and analgesia 2000
A D Sharma C L Parmley G Sreeram H P Grocott

Neuropathies involving the brachial plexus, phrenic, recurrent laryngeal, and saphenous nerves, as well as the sympathetic chain are complications of cardiac surgery. The reported frequency of nerve injuries varies from 1.5% to 24% for the brachial plexus and 10% to 60",,6 for the phrenic nerve (1-5). Neuropathies of the recurrent laryngeal, lower limb (saphenous) nerves, and the sympathetic ch...

Journal: :Revista espanola de cardiologia 2011
José Nieto-Tolosa Daniel Rodríguez-Sánchez José A Hurtado-Martínez Eduardo Pinar-Bermúdez Pablo Peñafiel-Verdú Juan J Sánchez-Muñoz Mariano Valdés-Chávarri Arcadio García-Alberola

Cryoballoon ablation of the pulmonary veins is a new technique that has proven useful in preventing paroxysmal and persistent atrial fibrillation recurrence. One of the most serious complications of this method is right phrenic nerve palsy. The usefulness of multidetector computed tomography to locate the right phrenic nerve and artery and predict the risk of phrenic nerve palsy during cryoabla...

2016
Fardin Yousefshahi Oana Predescu Melissa Colizza Juan Francisco Asenjo

Context. Postthoracotomy Ipsilateral Shoulder Pain (IPS) is a common and sometimes intractable pain syndrome. IPS is different from chest wall pain in type, origin, and treatments. Various treatments are suggested or applied for it but none of them is regarded as popular accepted effective one. Objectives. To review data and collect all present experiences about postthoracotomy IPS and its mana...

2012
Souvik Chaudhuri MD Gopalkrishna Cherish Paul Ratul Kundu

Ultrasound-guided peripheral nerve blocks facilitate ambulatory anesthesia for upper limb surgeries. Unilateral phrenic nerve blockade is a common complication after interscalene brachial plexus block, rather than the supraclavicular block. We report a case of severe respiratory distress and bilateral bronchospasm following ultrasound-guided supraclavicular brachial plexus block. Patient did no...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2003
Francis J Golder David D Fuller Paul W Davenport Richard D Johnson Paul J Reier Donald C Bolser

By 2 months after unilateral cervical spinal cord injury (SCI), respiratory motor output resumes in the previously quiescent phrenic nerve. This activity is derived from bulbospinal pathways that cross the spinal midline caudal to the lesion (crossed phrenic pathways). To determine whether crossed phrenic pathways contribute to tidal volume in spinally injured rats, spontaneous breathing was me...

Journal: :Thorax 1995
G H Mills D Kyroussis C H Hamnegard S Wragg J Moxham M Green

BACKGROUND Electrical stimulation of the phrenic nerve is a useful non-volitional method of assessing diaphragm contractility. During the assessment of hemidiaphragm contractility with electrical stimulation, low twitch transdiaphragmatic pressures may result from difficulty in locating and stimulating the phrenic nerve. Cervical magnetic stimulation overcomes some of these problems, but this t...

2010
F. Mignini M. Sabbatini V. D'Andrea C. Cavallotti

The aim of this study was to examine rat thymus innervation using denervation techniques and to explore the related micro-anatomical localization of dopamine, D1, D2 receptors and dopamine membrane transporter (DAT). In the thymus subcapsular region, the parenchymal cholinergic fibers belong exclusively to phrenic nerve branching. No somatic phrenic nerve branching was detected in any other ana...

Journal: :Journal of applied physiology 1996
S Iscoe

I determined whether prolonged inspiratory resistive loading (IRL) affects phrenic motoneuron discharge, independent of changes in chemical drive. In seven decerebrate spontaneously breathing cats, the discharge patterns of eight phrenic motoneurons from filaments of one phrenic nerve were monitored, along with the global activity of the contralateral phrenic nerve, transdiaphragmatic pressure,...

2013
Chun Woo Yang Jin Sung Bae Tae In Park Jong Cheol Lee Jeong Eun Sohn Ryunga Kang Kye Ho Lee

Phrenic nerve paralysis is an unusual complication associated with central venous catheterization. Various mechanisms have been proposed. We present a case of transient right hemidiaphragmatic paralysis after subclavian venous catheterization. We hypothesize that anatomical variation of the phrenic nerve was responsible for this complication.

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