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benzocaine

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anesthetic

 [an″es-thet´ik]
1. pertaining to, characterized by, or producing anesthesia.
2. a drug or agent used to abolish the sensation of pain, to achieve adequate muscle relaxation during surgery, to calm fear and allay anxiety, and to produce amnesia for the event.

Inhalational anesthetics are gases or volatile liquids that produce general anesthesia when inhaled. The commonly used inhalational agents are halothane, enflurane, isoflurane, and nitrous oxide. Older agents, such as ether and cyclopropane, are now used infrequently. The mechanism of action of all inhalational anesthetics is thought to involve uptake of the gas in the lipid bilayer of cell membranes and interaction with the membrane proteins, resulting in inhibition of synaptic transmission of nerve impulses. For surgical anesthesia, these agents are usually used with preanesthetic medication, which includes sedatives or opiates to relieve preoperative and postoperative pain and tranquilizers to reduce anxiety. Neuromuscular blocking agents are used as muscle relaxants during surgery. They include tubocurarine, metocurine, succinylcholine, pancuronium, atracurium, and vecuronium.

Intravenous anesthetics are sedative hypnotic drugs that produce anesthesia in large doses. The most common of these are the phenol derivative propofol and ultra–short acting barbiturates such as thiopental and methohexital; these can be used alone for brief surgical procedures or for rapid induction of anesthesia maintained by inhalational anesthetics.

Other intravenous methods of anesthesia are neuroleptanalgesia, which uses a combination of the butyrophenone tranquilizer droperidol and the opioid fentanyl; neuroleptanesthesia, which uses neuroleptanalgesia plus nitrous oxide; and dissociative anesthesia, which uses ketamine, a drug related to the hallucinogens that produces profound analgesia.

Local anesthetics are drugs that block nerve conduction in the region where they are applied. They act by altering permeability of nerve cells to sodium ions and thus blocking conduction of nerve impulses. They may be applied topically or injected into the tissues. The first local anesthetic was cocaine. Synthetic local anesthetics are all given names ending in -caine; examples are procaine and lidocaine.
Miller-Keane Encyclopedia and Dictionary of Medicine, Nursing, and Allied Health, Seventh Edition. © 2003 by Saunders, an imprint of Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.

ben·zo·caine

(ben'zō-kān),
The ethyl ester of p-aminobenzoic acid; a topical anesthetic agent.
Synonym(s): ethyl aminobenzoate
Farlex Partner Medical Dictionary © Farlex 2012

benzocaine

(bĕn′zə-kān′)
n.
A white, odorless, tasteless crystalline ester, C9H11NO2, used as a local anesthetic.
The American Heritage® Medical Dictionary Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

ben·zo·caine

(ben'zō-kān)
The ethyl ester of p-aminobenzoic acid; a topical anesthetic agent.
Medical Dictionary for the Health Professions and Nursing © Farlex 2012

benzocaine

A tasteless white powder with powerful local anesthetic properties. Often used in lozenges in combination with antiseptics. The drug is an ingredient in AAA Spray, Intralgin, Merocaine and Tyrozets.
Collins Dictionary of Medicine © Robert M. Youngson 2004, 2005

ben·zo·caine

(ben'zō-kān)
Topical anesthetic agent.
Medical Dictionary for the Dental Professions © Farlex 2012
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References in periodicals archive
Evaluation and management of acquired methemoglobinemia associated with topical benzocaine use.
intercepted quantities of benzocaine at Manchester and Coventry Airport.
In order to examine the hypothesis that stress during transport of Nile tilapia fingerlings can be reduced using appropriate doses of anesthetics, we assessed the effects of various concentrations of menthol, eugenol and benzocaine on the time interval for anesthesia induction, changes in biochemical and hematological parameters, and the survival rates of fingerlings by simulating the conditions normally used for transport.
Despite the widespread use of benzocaine, Blessing, Marshall, and Balcombe (2010) provide evidence favoring the use of ice-slurry over benzocaine in the humane killing of small-sized fish.
In order to evaluate the stress mitigating effectiveness of benzocaine, the concentrations of 0, 2 and 6 mg [L.sup.-1] were tested.
He was found with scales containing traces of cocaine, MDMA and benzocaine, as well as cannabis, a knife, PS3,000 cash and handwritten lists of chemicals.
McDowall, of Coverdale Road, Stockton, was given a two-year jail sentence suspended for two years with supervision and mental health treatment after he pleaded guilty to possession with intent to supply cocaine, being concerned in the supply of cocaine and encouraging or assisting in the commission of an offence in the illegal possession of Benzocaine.
Dene Long had obtained the benzocaine, which was being stored at the house of Cheetham's sister Karen.
In 2011 the FDA issued a warning that topical over-the-counter teething preparations containing benzocaine can lead to methemoglobinemia, a rare but occasionally fatal condition that results in a large decrease in the amount of oxygen in the blood.
The patient received care and various medications (amiodarone, atorvastatin, azithromycin, benzocaine, citalopram, clonazepam, fluticasone, levalbuterol, metoprolol, and ropinirole) at admission to control his blood pressure, cough, throat pain, and subarachnoid hemorrhage.
Here is a simple epilating wax formulation that contains benzocaine to reduce skin pain:
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