dinoprost has been researched along with Intestinal-Obstruction* in 4 studies
1 review(s) available for dinoprost and Intestinal-Obstruction
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[Analogs of prostaglandin-related substances and inhibitors of their formation and metabolism. Clinical application to the surgical field].
Topics: Alprostadil; Angiography; Arterial Occlusive Diseases; Dinoprost; Epoprostenol; Humans; Intestinal Obstruction; Postoperative Complications; Prostaglandins E; Prostaglandins F; Raynaud Disease | 1985 |
3 other study(ies) available for dinoprost and Intestinal-Obstruction
Article | Year |
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Effects of prostaglandin F2alpha and cisapride on small intestinal activity during the early postoperative period in humans.
The relationship between intestinal motor activity and the influence of prostaglandin F2alpha (PGF) and cisapride were investigated during the early postoperative period in 26 patients who underwent abdominal surgery. Records of intestinal motility were made using an infusion catheter. PGF, 0.4 microg/kg per minute, given intravenously over 60 min, and cisapride, 5 mg, given intraintestinally, were administered to 13 patients each, first immediately after the operation, and then after the migrating motor complexes (MMCs) had reappeared following a period of intestinal quiescence. The MMCs were reestablished within the first postoperative day. Both PGF and cisapride stimulated irregular, high-amplitude contractions; however, the MMCs reappeared following these induced contractions only if the drugs were administered just after the postoperative MMCs became evident. These prokinetic drugs did not affect gastrointestinal hormone concentrations, but induced contractile activity even in the early postoperative period. Although the findings of this study demonstrate that these drugs may be useful as prokinetic agents to promote recovery from postoperative ileus just after the reappearance of MMCs in the early postoperative period, their precise mode of action has not been established. Topics: Abdomen; Cisapride; Dinoprost; Female; Gastrointestinal Agents; Gastrointestinal Motility; Humans; Infusions, Intravenous; Intestinal Obstruction; Male; Middle Aged; Piperidines; Postoperative Complications; Surgical Procedures, Operative | 1998 |
Recovery of gastrointestinal motility from post-operative ileus in dogs: effects of Leu13-motilin (KW-5139) and prostaglandin F2 alpha.
Cyclical motor activity of the gastrointestinal tract, normally occurring during the interdigestive period in several mammals, is disrupted in the post-operative ileus. We determined the recovery from the disappearance of cyclical motor activity, from the stomach to the colon, in dogs after laparotomy with the force transducers. Moreover, we examined the effects of Leu13-motilin (KW-5139) and prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), administered in the early post-operative period, on the gastrointestinal motility. Following laparotomy, the cyclical motor activity reappeared firstly in the ileum and the colon, then in the jejunum and the duodenum, and finally in the stomach. The reappearance time of the phase III contractions in the stomach was 105.8 +/- 10.6 h (n = 4). In the early post-operative period, KW-5139 (0.5 microgram kg-1, i.v.) induced phase-III-like contractions, whereas PGF2 alpha (50 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) induced simultaneously occurring contractions over the whole gastrointestine. The treatment with KW-5139 (0.5 microgram kg-1, i.v.) four times (twice daily on the first and the second post-operative day) significantly (P < 0.05) shortened the time required to recover the phase III contractions in the stomach (64.2 +/- 2.2 h, n = 4), whereas that with PGF2 alpha (50 micrograms kg-1, i.v.) four times did not (111.3 +/- 17.2 h, n = 4). The present results indicate that, after laparotomy, the cyclical motor activity recovers faster in the distal intestine than in the proximal intestine and the stomach, and that KW-5139, but not PGF2 alpha, shortens the reappearance time of the phase III activity in the stomach. Topics: Analysis of Variance; Animals; Biomechanical Phenomena; Dinoprost; Dogs; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Gastrointestinal Motility; Hormones; Intestinal Obstruction; Male; Motilin; Postoperative Complications; Random Allocation; Stimulation, Chemical | 1995 |
[Effect of totally synthetic racemic prostaglandins F2 alpha and 15 alpha-OH-11-deoxyprostaglandin E1 on small intestine motility in rabbits with dynamic ileus].
A comparative analysis of the effect of racemic PGF2 alpha--(+/-)PGF2 alpha, 15 alpha OH-II-deoxy-PGE1-(+/-)DPGE1, aceclidine, neostigmine methylsufate, galanthamini hydrobromidum, and pituitrine on the ileum motility was performed in rabbits with dynamic ileus induced by surgical trauma and peritonitis. In the model under study (+/-)PGF2 alpha was similar in its action to neostigmine methylsulfate and aceclidine, with (+/-)DPGE1 having a week effect. Topics: Alprostadil; Animals; Dinoprost; Gastrointestinal Motility; Intestinal Obstruction; Intestine, Small; Male; Peritonitis; Prostaglandins E, Synthetic; Prostaglandins F; Prostaglandins F, Synthetic; Rabbits; Stereoisomerism | 1986 |