Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0002962 (angina)
21,142 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

More than 1200 patients who received pindolol for the treatment of hypertension, angina pectoris, and various arrhythmias in studies conducted in the United States were included in the New Drug Application submitted to the FDA. Nearly 1000 of these patients received pindolol as monotherapy. The side effects reported were generally transient and of mild or moderate severity. The most frequently reported side effects seen after pindolol administration, compared to those seen after placebo, were in decreasing order of incidence: headache, dizziness, insomnia, muscle pain, fatigue, weakness, nervousness, joint pain, edema, nausea, and muscle cramps. Other side effects that occurred more frequently with pindolol than with placebo but at a rather low incidence induced weight gain, bizarre dreams, visual disturbances, lethargy, and diarrhea. Nasal congestion, throat discomfort, nocturia, impotence, pruritus, anxiety, hypotension, bradycardia, and heart failure occurred only rarely. Of the 323 patients who received pindolol alone for the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension, only 20 (6.2%) were withdrawn from the study because of side effects. Overall, 3.4% of the patients treated with pindolol were withdrawn because of side effects, most of which involved the central nervous system, that is, insomnia, anxiety, dizziness, and headache. However, a few patients manifested some edema and weight gain while receiving pindolol alone. Review of the side effects data did not reveal a tendency for the incidence of side effects to be dose related. One placebo-controlled, double-blind study designed to evaluate the fixed dosages of 15, 30, and 60 mg in the treatment of mild to moderate hypertension suggested that only the incidences of insomnia and nervousness increased with increasing doses. However, these side effects were generally transient and of mild or moderate severity. The evidence indicates that pindolol has an acceptable safety profile and that any side effects that appear are generally well tolerated and disappear with continued treatment.
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PMID:Adverse reactions to pindolol administration. 704 82

Vasomax is an oral preparation of phentolamine mesilate (Zonagen Pharmaceuticals) currently undergoing worldwide regulatory approval for distribution. Phentolamine is primarily an alpha-adrenergic antagonist with mild sympatholytic action and a beta-adrenergic stimulating action. Over 30 years of clinical experience has shown it to be a strong direct vasodilator on muscular walled vessels, likely based on its inhibitory action on adenosine 5-triphosphate-sensitive potassium channels. This medication is not new, having been marketed in the United States in an oral formulation between 1952 and 1984. Phentolamine initially achieved FDA approval for preoperative use in patients with pheochromocytoma for control of blood pressure and paroxysmal hypertensive episodes. In the past it had been evaluated for hypertension, pulmonary disease, cardiac arrhythmias, angina pectoris and peripheral vascular disease. Unfortunately for most of these indications the clinical responses to oral phentolamine have been variable. The most clinically significant adverse events associated with oral phentolamine in the past were systemic hypotension and vasomotor collapse, severe gastrointestinal side effects especially diarrhea and some complaints of nasal congestion. In this review we will concentrate on phentolamine in a new preparation for on demand treatment of erectile dysfunction of mild to moderate degrees.
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PMID:Oral phentolamine (Vasomax). 1287 9

A 78-year-old female with a history of stable angina, phoned for advice with chest pains following the application of 0.5% ephedrine nasal drops for nasal congestion, which she had bought over-the-counter on the recommendation of a pharmacist. On applying the medication, she developed chest pain which she recognised as her angina. The Foundation Year 2 general practitioner on duty consulted the British National Formulary (BNF), issue 56 and thought that nasal decongestant induced angina was unlikely and advised the patient to seek emergency attention should she have any further episodes. After re-applying the medication and suffering the same symptoms, the patient later presented to the Emergency Department. The patient had the relevant tests and was diagnosed with 'ephedrine-induced angina'. This settled on withdrawal of the medication and she had no further episodes of chest pain in the following 6 months.
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PMID:An unusual case of systemic cardiovascular side effects from the application of over-the-counter nasal decongestion drops. 2269 73