Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002874 (aplastic anemia)
5,905 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Our data show that 1% of patients who required hospital treatment did so due to severe adverse reactions to analgesics. The most frequent adverse reaction was major gastrointestinal bleeding after aspirin, indomethacin, phenylbutazone or naproxen. Thrombocytopenia, second in frequency, was also mainly a complication of aspirin treatment, as was severe vertigo and tinnitus. Allergic reactions and leucopenia or agranulocytosis occurring in single cases only were associated with the use of pyrazolones. Patients with nephropathy were usually taking phenacetin or one of the close derivatives paracetamol or bucetin. Intensive monitoring for adverse reactions to drugs in 6,000 hospitalised patients in medical wards showed that analgesics, although frequently used, did not lead to life-threatening reactions. Gastrointestinal and neurological side effects were the most commonly observed reactions and these occurred more often after aspirin, indomethacin or pentazocine than after dipyrone or tilidine. Preliminary data of an international case-control-study on agranulocytosis and aplastic anaemia suggest that the incidence of agranulocytosis was in the order of 2 to 3 per million users of analgesics per year. Agranulocytosis occurred predominantly with pyrazolones, with a mortality of 1 to 2 per 10 million users per year. A cohort study on the treatment of colic pain in general practice showed that serious events most likely due to adverse reactions to analgesics were bronchospasm, shock fragments or shock. The incidence of these serious events was about 2 in 1,000 treated cases. The relative risk was not increased by treatment with pyrazolones, opioids or other drugs.
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PMID:Rare but serious risks associated with non-narcotic analgesics: clinical experience. 382 33

In the present study, the clinical and audiological features of 3 patients with aplastic anemia who subsequently developed sudden sensorineural hearing loss are reported. These patients, for whom a diagnosis of aplastic anemia had previously been confirmed, suddenly developed profound or complete hearing loss accompanied by tinnitus and severe vertigo. In addition to erythrocytopenia and thrombocytopenia, serial hematological examinations revealed a marked drop in the platelet count prior to or just at the time of the acute episode of hearing loss. The prognosis for hearing recovery was poor in each patient. These findings suggest that intracochlear hemorrhage could be a mechanism underlying the sudden sensorineural hearing loss in these patients.
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PMID:Aplastic anemia and sudden sensorineural hearing loss. 807 94