View clinical trials related to Lidocaine Adverse Reaction.
Filter by:Post-herpetic neuralgia (PHN) is the most frequent complications related to herpes zoster, and can persist for months or even years, and require extensive treatment. For this purpose, pharmacological therapies based on tricyclic antidepressants (amitriptyline), central nervous system depressants (pregabalin) and also opioids, have been stablished. However, all the drugs mentioned can cause serious systemic adverse effects that worsen the patient's quality of life. To avoid these complications, topical therapies based on Capsaicin or Lidocaine 5% patches have been developed. However, these treatments have shown dissimilar results in controlling PHN, so a mixed formulation of lidocaine/tetracaine could show better results. For these reasons, the main objective of our work is to evaluate the plasma levels of lidocaine derived from the application of a topical formulation of lidocaine derived from the application of a topical formulation of lidocaine 23%/tetracaine 7% in patients with neuropathic pain.
Thoracic epidural analgesia (TEA) is the gold standard analgesia of the laparotomy in major abdominal surgery and can be associated with intravenous lidocaine or subtituted by intravenous lidocaine when TEA is contraindicated and in order to reduce the use of the morphinics in the perioperative period. Side effects can be paralytic ileus or nausea and vomiting and delay the enhanced recovery after surgery. Intravenous lidocaine and TEA share several properties like anti hyperalgesia, anti inflammatory effect, intestinal process, anti tumoral effect… which suggests an additive effect of their combination that was not studied yet.