Faculty of Medicine
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Item type:Publication, Treatment of acute postoperative pain, the new face of multimodal analgesia(Serbian Society of Pain, Belgrade, Serbia, 2023-05-23) ;Ivana Budic ;Vesna Marjanovic ;Ivana Gajevic ;Jelena LilicMarija Stevic19 Treatment of acute postoperative pain, the new face of multimodal analgesia Ivana Budić1,2, Vesna Marjanović1,2, Ivana Gajević2, Jelena Lilić2, Marija Stević3,4, Marija Jovanovski-Srceva5,6, Dušica Simić3,4 1Department of Surgery and Anesthesiology, Medical Faculty, University of Niš, Serbia; 2Clinic for Anesthesiology and Intensive Therapy, University Clinical Center Niš, Serbia; 3Department of Surgery and Anesthesiology, Medical Faculty, University of Belgrade, Serbia; 4University Children’s Hospital, Belgrade, Serbia; 5University Clinic for TOARILUC, Skopje, N. Macedonia; 6 Medical Faculty, UKIM, Skopje, N. Macedonia ABSTRACT Management of pain remains undertreated in the pediatric population. Multimodal an- algesia (MMA) integrates the use of several analgesic medications, each of which targets a different pain-related receptor, and thereby exhibits its pain reducing effect by way of a different mechanism of action. MMA approach to pain management includes phar- macologic and non-pharmacologic options. Effective postoperative analgesia in infants and young children continues to evolve with innovative methods of therapy using new- er drugs or older drugs introduced via novel routes. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Topical anesthetics for pediatric laser treatment(Taylor & Francis, 2019) ;Marija Stevic ;Ana Vlajkovic ;Branislav Trifunovic ;Ivan RakicNina RisticTopical anesthetic agent causes transient insensibility to pain in a limited area of skin, and provides effective anesthesia in a short onset time, short duration, with seldom local or systemic side effects on intact skin and is simple to use. Topical formulations may offer significant benefits for prevention of procedural pain. Currently, they are considered to be the most effective anesthesia for laser treatments. Unfortunately, there is no standard anesthetic technique for this procedure. Lasers are being widely used in numerous dermatological and esthetics treatments in childhood. The advancement of new knowledge in laser technology have contributed to the development of new lasers that are commonly used in a pediatric population, such as Pulsed Dye, Carbon-dioxide and Nd:YAG laser. The most commonly used topical anesthetics in young patients for minimally or moderately painful laser cutaneous procedures are Lidocaine, Prilocaine, Tetracaine gel and combinations thereof. - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Item type:Publication, Evaluation of factors for poor outcome in preterm newborns with posthemorrhagic hydrocephalus associated with late-onset neonatal sepsis(Dove Press, 2018-10) ;Marija Stevic ;Dusica Simic ;Nina Ristic ;Ivana BudicVesna Marjanovic
