It is a drug used to cause a brief period of complete muscle relaxation.
I believe you're thinking of succinylcholine.
sdfa
Ideal 14 days 4 weeks max due to ph changes
The only way to get malignant hyperthermia is (1) have the genes and (2) get a drug called succinylcholine, which is used to paralyze muscles for surgery.
Due to how Succinylcholine metabolizes in Lumbee indians. It does not work as it should, immediately, but last longer in the body, causing paralysis a few hours to a few days later. It is a paralytic drug given pre-hospital care for head trauma with breathing issues, etc... Most paramedics know this information as it is one of the required drugs on the EMT-P formulary. Can not say that other medical staff will be as knowledgable.
Acetylcholine Inhibitors...That would include organophosphates, curare (or tubocuranine), succinylcholine, (a flaccid paralytic used in anesthesia to relax striated muscles for intubation), and various neurotoxins.
Onset of .5-1 min IV lasting 2-3 min. Onset of 2-3 min IM lasting 10-30 min
This is a receptor agonist widely used as a muscle relaxant, both in people but also to induce paralysis in horses.It is also known as Anectine and Quelicin. In a hospital it is also known as "succs". It is also sometimes referred to as the poeple's medecine.
It can act presynaptically on Nicotinic 2 receptors which increases the release of AcH potentiating the block at the motor end plate.
As part of the induction process of a general anaesthetic, you are given a muscle blockade (succinylcholine, pancuronium bromide etc) that allows surgeons to cut through muscle easily. As part of the residual effects of intestinal muscle blockade that propels faeces to the rectum, you may be constipated from that.
It is possible for chemicals to affect the body's motor nerve receptors, thereby making movement impossible.
yes, status epilepticus is a medical emergency, and you can treat it either by:drug of choice - diazepam, or lorazepam (given intravenously)phenytoin / fosphenytoin (given intravenously)phenobarbitone (given intravenously)these treatments are given as urgent, vigorous, IV and in-patient treatment.But, in severe refractory state, you might also have to give general anesthesia and neuromuscular blockers (curarine derivatives: tubocurarine, succinylcholine)