Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0000729 (abdominal cramps)
531 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

2 cases of unrecognized oviduct pregnancy receiving therapeutic abortion by uterine aspiration are reported. A 29-year-old white female, gravida 4, para 2 with a Dalkon Shield in place for 2 1/2 years and with 6 weeks amenorrhea received a therapeutic abortion. 3 days later the patient complained of fever and severe suprapubic cramps. Minocycline was given in the belief that the patient was suffering from endometritis. 17 days after uterine aspiration the pain increased. At laparoscopy a corpus luteum was seen in the left ovary and blood was present in the pelvis. Histological examination of the oviducts revealed signs of an aborted oviduct pregnant. A 2nd case concerned a 26-year-old white female, gravida 2, para 2, using the Ogino-Knaus method of contraception and who had a normal menses 7 weeks previously. 12 days after uterine aspiration the patient complained of continued vaginal bleeding, lower abdominal cramps, and chills. After uterine aspiration was repeated minocycline therapy was initated. 20 days after the initial aspiration the patient reported a return of vaginal bleeding and lower abdominal pain. Laparotomy revealed a ruptured oviduct. Histology showed salpingitis and fusion of the right fimbria and a large blood clot and trophoblastic villi in the lumen of the right ampulla. In the future it is suggested that histological examination of the aspiration should be performed to aid in finding oviductal or ovarian pregnancies.
...
PMID:Case reports: unrecognized oviduct pregnancy and therapeutic abortion by uterine aspiration. 97 19

In a group of patients affected with psoriatic arthritis the effects of the association between gold salts (GS) and somatostatin (SOM), in comparison with two groups treated with SOM and GS respectively, were investigated. Sixty patients with psoriatic arthritis were selected and randomly allocated in three groups of twenty patients each. Group 1 received SOM infusion (250 micrograms/h for 96 h) and was assessed at baseline and 1, 15, 30, 60, 90 and 120 days after; Group 2 received intramuscular GS and was assessed at baseline, four months later, and then every month for four months; Group 3 received GS for 8 months; at the fourth month SOM was infused (as in Group 1) and the patients assessed at baseline four months later and then as Group 1. Assessment was made with the Ritchie index, pain scale and morning stiffness evaluation. Growth hormone was assayed in Group 1 every 4 h for 24 h the day before and the day after SOM infusion. The association between GS and SOM demonstrated a particular analgesic activity, effective on joint pain and tenderness, that lasted for all four months of follow-up. SOM showed a good response only after 15 and 30 days, and GS proved to be effective at about the sixth month of treatment. Side effects were reported in Group 1 (abdominal cramps, mild erythrodermia and supraventricular arrhythmia). A growth hormone circadian rhythm was found in psoriatic patients both before and after SOM treatment. The beneficial effect of the SOM/GS combination is demonstrated in psoriatic arthritis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Gold salts and somatostatin: a new combined analgesic treatment for psoriatic arthritis. 135 20

MK-329 is a nonpeptidal, highly specific cholecystokinin (CCK) receptor antagonist, with affinity for pancreatic and gallbladder CCK receptors similar to CCK itself. MK-329 and its progenitor, asperlicin, can inhibit the growth of CCK receptor-positive human pancreatic cancer in athymic mice. Based on these activities and the ability of MK-329 to transiently increase food intake and enhance morphine analgesia in murine models, we conducted an open trial of MK-329 in 18 patients with advanced pancreatic cancer in whom the CCK receptor status of the tumors was unknown. Tumor response, pain control, and nutritional parameters (hunger rating, caloric intake, body weight, and anthropometrics) were serially assessed. The results of the study failed to demonstrate any impact of MK-329 on tumor progression, pain, or nutrition. Toxicity was mild and limited to nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and abdominal cramps, with 17 of 18 patients able to tolerate treatment. While a role for MK-329 in the management of patients with advanced pancreatic cancer cannot be supported by the results of this trial, additional studies of this agent in patients with known CCK receptor-positive tumors, at escalated doses, and possibly in conjunction with other growth antagonists, appear warranted.
...
PMID:A pilot clinical trial of the cholecystokinin receptor antagonist MK-329 in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. 155 66

Nursing management of second trimester abortion by PGE2 suppository after cervical dilatation with laminaria or Lamicel focuses on monitoring and treating side effects, managing pain, and supporting the patient emotionally. Mean abortion time by this method is 15-17 hours, within 24 hours in 80% of women. The side effects expected from PGs are nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps, and diarrhea. Premedication with transdermal scopolamine, and ancillary methods such as giving ice chips, airing the room, keeping the patient clean are helpful. Acetaminophen is given orally or rectally for fever, headache, or chills. A beta-adrenergic tocolytic drug such as ritodrine HC1 is given if uterine contractions become tetanic, contractions 2-3 per minute or lasting longer than 6-90 seconds, detected by palpation. This drug must be used with caution in patients with asthma. Pain management in midtrimester abortion depends solely on the woman's comfort. Meperidine, morphine, epidural anesthesia with bupivacaine, lidocaine or morphine SO4, or patient-controlled anesthesia may be used. The nurse should monitor side effects such as hypotension, allergic responses, arrhythmias, and inability to void. Midtrimester abortion is often a stress-filled experience, since women may be ambivalent upon learning of fetal abnormalities. The women should be monitored after delivery to ensure that her uterus remains contracted, and assisted if surgical removal of retained products is necessary. Patients teaching for discharge, including medication to prevent lactation, is described. A care plan is suggested for assisting the family with bereavement, based on that used in case of stillbirth or neonatal deaths.
...
PMID:Second-trimester termination of pregnancy: nursing care. 156 89

Patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) is designed to avoid both excessive and inadequate analgesia in postoperative pain by allowing the patient self-administration of intravenous narcotics within a range of parameters established by the physician. Of 24 patients undergoing elective cholecystectomy referred to our study over a 12-month period, 11 were assigned to PCA and eight successfully completed the study. Most of them had good analgesia, were satisfied with PCA, and had no evidence of confusion, psychic distress, or visual-motor impairment. Serum morphine concentrations of 10-30 ng/mL were sufficient to obtain good analgesia in six of eight patients. Complications included severe respiratory depression and abdominal cramps.
...
PMID:Patient-controlled analgesia for postcholecystectomy pain: a pilot study. 230 69

A multicenter, randomized, double-blind trial was conducted to compare the efficacy of Cafergot P-B with that of its components, Cafergot, pentobarbital, and Bellafoline, and with placebo for the treatment of migraine. Patients with vascular headaches of the migraine type who regularly experienced nervous tension and some form of gastrointestinal distress with their headaches were randomized to one of five treatment groups. They were given treatment packets containing their assigned drug for use during two separate migraine attacks. Patients made pretreatment evaluations of the following symptoms: head pain, nervous tension, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, abdominal cramps, and photophobia. They made posttreatment evaluations of these symptoms 0.5, 1.0, 1.5, 2.0, and 3.0 hours after ingesting their assigned drug. Improvement scores were calculated from the differences between the pretreatment and the posttreatment ratings. Patients also made a final global assessment of their drug's efficacy. All patients who took at least one dose of the study medication and completed a baseline evaluation and at least one postdose evaluation of severity of pain were included in the analysis (n = 254). The comparisons of particular interest were those between Cafergot P-B and Cafergot and between Cafergot P-B and placebo. Cafergot P-B was significantly more effective than Cafergot in relieving head pain at hours 2 and 3, nervous tension, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and photophobia. Cafergot P-B was significantly more effective than placebo in relieving head pain, nervous tension, nausea (second headache only), vomiting, and photphobia. The incidence of reported adverse effects was no greater with Cafergot P-B than with Cafergot; however, patients given Cafergot P-B reported less vomiting than did patients given Cafergot. The results of this study show that addition of pentobarbital and Bellafoline to Cafergot provides greater relief of pain, vomiting, nervous tension, photophobia, and other symptoms associated with migraine, while reducing the severity of the nausea that may accompany a migraine headache or Cafergot therapy.
...
PMID:Symptomatic relief of migraine: multicenter comparison of Cafergot P-B, Cafergot, and placebo. 249 84

The incidence of multiple conceptions is higher than the incidence of multiple deliveries. The "vanishing fetus" is a relatively new concept being a direct result of the advent of ultrasonography. Early first trimester loss of one or more conceptuses accounts for this phenomenon. The patient may be symptomatic (bleeding, pain, abdominal cramps) but in most instances, the finding is fortuitous. We report 17 cases of a vanishing fetus in a multiple gestation of greater than twins. In 13 patients one fetus vanished in the course of pregnancy while in four cases two fetuses disappeared from each gestation. The phenomenon was observed up to the 16th week of pregnancy. It is our feeling that the finding of a vanishing fetus should be recorded early, as the prognosis for pregnancy bleeding is different than in the singleton pregnancy. Thus information regarding this phenomenon should be given to couples who consider artificial reduction of fetuses in the multiple gestation.
...
PMID:The vanishing fetus. A report of 17 cases of triplets and quadruplets. 268 69

Octreotide is an analogue of somatostatin. Like endogenous somatostatin, it exerts a potent inhibitory effect on the release of anterior pituitary growth hormone and thyroid-stimulating hormone, and peptides of the gastroenteropancreatic endocrine system, while overcoming some of the shortcomings of exogenously administered somatostatin, namely a short duration of action, a need for intravenous administration and postinfusion rebound hypersecretion of hormone. Clinical studies have shown that octreotide is effective in the treatment of acromegaly and thyrotrophinomas. In comparative trials octreotide was significantly superior to bromocriptine in patients with acromegaly. Octreotide also appears to provide a significant advantage over existing therapies in the management of the carcinoid syndrome and offers considerable therapeutic potential in reversing carcinoid crises which may be life-threatening. Trials in patients with tumours producing vasoactive intestinal peptide demonstrated that octreotide may be an effective first-line choice for this condition, which has usually metastasised and become refractory to traditional symptomatic therapy. In limited studies in patients with high-output secretory diarrhoea, including cryptosporidium-related diarrhoea associated with AIDS and in patients with small bowel fistulas, octreotide has been shown to be effective in reducing stool/fistula output. However, well-designed clinical trials are still required to confirm its long term usefulness in these disorders. Similarly, although the use of octreotide in other conditions such as neonatal hypoglycaemia caused by nesidioblastosis, reactive pancreatitis, insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, postprandial hypotension and the dumping syndrome has provided encouraging preliminary results, more studies are needed to clarify the place of octreotide in their treatment. Overall, octreotide appears to be well tolerated with the most frequently reported reactions being pain at the site of injection and gastrointestinal symptoms such as abdominal cramps, nausea, bloating, flatulence, diarrhoea and steatorrhoea. These adverse effects usually abate with time. Additionally, octreotide, like endogenous somatostatin, may also result in cholelithiasis, presumably by altering fat absorption and possibly by decreasing motility of the gallbladder. Thus, octreotide represents a new departure from traditional therapies in the treatment of various pathophysiological states associated with excessive peptide production and secretion. It offers a significant advantage over existing therapies in the medical management of patients with acromegaly, thyrotrophinomas, the carcinoid syndrome, tumours producing vasoactive intestinal peptide and severe secretory diarrhoea in whom conventional management options have either become exhausted or have provided suboptimal symptomatic relief.
...
PMID:Octreotide. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, and therapeutic potential in conditions associated with excessive peptide secretion. 268 36

Hypochlorhydria induced by potent antisecretory drugs is followed by a marked elevation of serum gastrin levels which leads to changes in ECL cell density in rats. "Soft" antiulcer drugs like prostaglandins do not increase gastrin levels. Their use in peptic ulcer disease seems to be mainly limited by a relatively high incidence of diarrhea and abdominal cramps. Rioprostil is a new prostaglandin E1 analogue. We compared the potency and duration of action of rioprosil 600 micrograms nocte with 300 micrograms bid on human gastric secretion in a placebo-controlled double-blind study. We further evaluated the clinical effectiveness of rioprostil 600 micrograms nocte in the acute treatment of duodenal ulcer. Nocturnal gastric acidity (24:00 to 08:00) was inhibited from 54.5 +/- 1.7 mmol H+/L (placebo experiments; n =9) to 26.7 +/- 3.5 mmol H+/L (52%) by rioprostil 300 micrograms bid (p less than 0.05) and to 14.4 +/- 3.8 mmol H+/L (74%) by rioprostil 600 micrograms nocte (p less than 0.05). During the daytime (09:00 to 18:00), H+ activity was reduced by 33% and 15% respectively (n.s.). Two hundred and three patients with endoscopically proven duodenal ulcers were randomly allocated to treatment with either rioprostil 600 micrograms nocte or ranitidine 300 mg nocte for 4 weeks in a prospective double-blind study. The two groups were similar. After 2 and 4 weeks treatment respectively, about 55% and 85% of patients healed on rioprostil 600 micrograms nocte and 55% and 90% on ranitidine 300 mg nocte. There were no differences between the treatment groups in ulcer pain relief.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Prostaglandins and peptic ulcer disease: nocturnal administration of rioprostil vs ranitidine in duodenal ulcer healing. 310 57

Voluntary abortions in day hospitals fulfill the need for shorter hospital stays and minimal interference with patient activities; on the other hand, it makes it more difficult to evaluate the possible complications of anesthesia. 1820 patients who received general anesthesia for voluntary abortion were given a questionnaire before they were discharged; items queried included drowsiness, headache, dizziness, nausea or vomiting, sore throat or mouth, abdominal cramps, pain at IV site, backache or muscular cramps, inability to perform daily activities. Only 465 patients returned the questionnaire. The most frequent complaint was sleepiness or drowsiness (19.8%), headache (7.1%), dizziness (15.1%), nausea or vomiting (8.2%), abdominal cramps (24.7%), and backache (16.7%). There seems to be less nausea or vomiting with the use of pentothal rather than alothane. Ketamine was never used on its own. The findings seen to suggest that the simplest combinations of drugs result in fewer and less severe complications than the use of several drugs.
...
PMID:[Minor sequelae of ambulatory anesthesia]. 345 85


1 2 3 4 5 Next >>