Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0008031 (chest pain)
17,248 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 32-year-old female patient was operated on for a residual colonic stricture occurring after hemicolectomy. A right internal jugular central venous catheter was inserted during the anaesthetic for postoperative parenteral feeding. The anaesthetic combined both general and epidural anaesthesia, the latter being continued for postoperative analgesia (10 ml.h-1 of 0.125% bupivacaine). Two days later, the patient complained of sudden chest pain, with restlessness, tachycardia, cyanosis, resulting in ventricular tachycardia and cardiac arrest. When admitted to the surgical intensive care unit, the patient was in deep coma and had nonsustained ventricular tachycardia, a left haemopneumothorax and a pneumopericardium. The patient died before a definitive diagnosis was made. Postmortem examination revealed an ulcerated anterior pillar of the tricuspid valve, as well as a perforation of the right ventricle and a communication between the pericardium and the left pleural cavity. The diagnosis and treatment of this rare life-threatening complication may be very difficult. It prevention consists in using short catheters for internal jugular venous access, and checking the tip's position radiologically by opacifying the catheter.
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PMID:[Cardiac tamponade and central venous catheterization]. 150 94

In the last few years the non cardiac angina-like chest pain has encompassed more and more agitation not only in many patients but also in cardiologists, gastroenterologists and psychologists, as it involves socio-economic, pathophysiologic and therapeutic problems. The socio-economic aspect is well explained by the fact that in the USA at least 200,000 patients a year suffering from non cardiac angina-like chest pain, even when coronary arteriography has demonstrated normal coronary vessels, nevertheless continue to require cardiologic examinations and, if no one has clearly demonstrated the origin of their pain, they continue to live as invalids in constant fear of myocardial infarction. The discovery that the esophagus may be one of the causes of chest pain in these patients presenting with a previous diagnosis of "atypical" angina pectoris, unfortunately cannot resolve definitively the problem. An association of esophageal angina in patients with angina pectoris treated for long periods of time with Ca-antagonists and nitroderivatives has been described. In addition, the provocative or spontaneous tests to demonstrate the esophageal origin of chest pain give only a "likely" and not a "definite" diagnosis of esophageal angina. This also means to no "gold standard" text exist. Lastly, the "likely" diagnosis of esophageal angina is made in only about 50% of patients leaving the problem of the remaining 50% unanswered. These uncertainties induce some psychologists to assert that the cause of non cardiac angina-like chest pain is in the head ("panic disorder") and not in the esophagus, where the observed motor disorders should be an epiphenomenon.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:["Esophageal" angina and angina pectoris]. 206 72

We present a retrospective study of 127 cases of amphetamine toxicity in an emergency department (ED). The most common presenting symptoms seen were agitation, hallucinations, suicidal behavior, and chest pain. Toxicologic analysis showed amphetamines are generally not mixed with other stimulants. The vast majority of patients did not require pharmacologic treatment in the ED. Thirteen patients (10%) required admission to the hospital. Toxic medical effects of amphetamine-related compounds seen in our patients are discussed.
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PMID:Amphetamine toxicity: experience with 127 cases. 266 73

A 16 year old male who ingested an estimated 6-8 grams of caffeine is described. Caffeine is commonly thought to be harmless, but its wide availability has promoted abuse. This patient manifested many of the adverse effects seen in acute caffeine ingestion including hypokalemia, elevated blood glucose, tachycardia, bigeminy and agitation. Respiratory alkalosis and chest pain, which have not been previously reported to our knowledge in caffeine overdose, were also noted in this patient. Three serum caffeine levels were analyzed and an abnormally long elimination half-life of approximately 16 hours was calculated from the results.
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PMID:Caffeine overdose in an adolescent male. 319 94

1 Fifty infusions of epoprostenol (PGI2) were made, usually increasing the infusion rate until adverse effects were encountered. The volunteers were appraised that they might experience headache and facial flushing. 2 Facial flushing, headache, tachycardia and decrease in diastolic blood pressure were seen in almost all subjects. Erythema over the venous infusing site was also encountered in 13 infusions. Less common effects were sudden bradycardia, pallor and sweating--the vagal reflex--(seven times) and chest pain (twice). Other complaints included restlessness, abdominal discomfort, nausea and drowsiness. 3 The literature on side effects reported during PGI2 infusion is reviewed and recommendations are made concerning administration of PGI2.
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PMID:Side effects occurring during administration of epoprostenol (prostacyclin, PGI2), in man. 704 12

"T's and B's" is the street name for the combination of pentazocine and tripelennamine. This combination of drugs has emerged as a major intravenous substitute for heroin in recent years, especially in the Midwest. 104 cases involving 82 patients over a 9-month period were seen at St. Elizabeth Medical Center in Dayton, Ohio. Abscesses and cellulitis were seen in 39% of cases. A characteristic drug reaction involved 38% of cases, and consisted of chest pain, agitation, anxiety, muscle spasms, dizziness, diaphoresis, and nausea as well as other symptoms. Seizures, syncope, and near-syncope were seen in 15% of cases, and a previously described pulmonary reaction involved 38% of cases, and consisted of chest pain syndrome was seen in 4% of the cases.
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PMID:"T's and B's"-Midwestern heroin substitute. 731 93

The prevalence and clinical picture of hypertensive urgencies and emergencies in an emergency department are poorly known. The aim of the present study was to evaluate the prevalence of hypertensive crises (urgencies and emergencies) in an emergency department during 12 months of observation and the frequency of end-organ damage with related clinical pictures during the first 24 hours after presentation. Hypertensive crises (76% urgencies, 24% emergencies) represented more than one fourth of all medical urgencies-emergencies. The most frequent signs of presentation were headache (22%), epistaxis (17%), faintness, and psychomotor agitation (10%) in hypertensive urgencies and chest pain (27%), dyspnea (22%), and neurological deficit (21%) in hypertensive emergencies. Types of end-organ damage associated with hypertensive emergencies included cerebral infarction (24%), acute pulmonary edema (23%), and hypertensive encephalopathy (16%) as well as cerebral hemorrhage, which accounted for only 4.5%. Age (67 +/- 16 versus 60 +/- 14 years [mean +/- SD], P < .001) and diastolic blood pressure (130 +/- 15 versus 126 +/- 10 mm Hg, P < .002) were higher in hypertensive emergencies than urgencies. Hypertension that was unknown at presentation was present in 8% of hypertensive emergencies and 28% of hypertensive urgencies. In conclusion hypertensive urgencies and emergencies are common events in the emergency department and differ in their clinical patterns of presentation. Cerebral infarction and acute pulmonary edema are the most frequent types of end-organ damage in hypertensive emergencies.
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PMID:Hypertensive urgencies and emergencies. Prevalence and clinical presentation. 859 78

A 46-year-old man involved in a traffic accident was admitted to our university hospital for treatment of acute subdural hematoma of the brain, multiple rib fractures and hemothorax. On admission, he manifested disturbance of consciousness, and his left upper and lower extremities were paralyzed. Blood gas analysis revealed hypoxia, and he was nasotracheally intubated. He was mechanically ventilated with 10 cmH2O positive end-expiratory pressure for treatment of rib fractures following surgical removal of the subdural hematoma and insertion of a sensor into the epidural space for measurement of intracranial pressure. Despite continuous intravenous infusion of midazolam and buprenorphine, he was agitated and thrashed from side to side, probably due to severe chest pain caused by rib fractures. Agitation was effectively controlled by continuous thoracic epidural administration of morphine and bupivacaine. Intracranial pressure did not increase, and epidural analgesia was without sequelae. The patient's level of consciousness gradually improved, rib fractures were treated and he was extubated on the 25th hospital day. These findings indicate that epidural analgesia is useful for controlling pain-related agitation caused by head and chest injuries if increased intracranial pressure is not present.
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PMID:[Effective treatment of a man with head injury and multiple rib fractures with epidural analgesia]. 886 12

Fifty-eight outpatients with panic disorder (PD) were examined to determine their clinical features in comparison with a cohort of 52 patients with generalised anxiety disorder (GAD). Both groups were of comparable age, sex, educational level, marital status and ethnicity. PD patients were more likely to complain of palpitations, breathlessness, chest pain, numbness, choking sensations and especially fear of dying. GAD patients tended to complain of feeling tense, insomnia, headaches, weakness, restlessness and muscle aches. PD patients had greater comorbidity especially with agoraphobia and depression. Contrary to other reports, there were more males than females in both groups but alcohol dependence and suicide attempts were relatively rare. PD symptoms seemed more distressing, caused more social and occupational disruption, led to more requests for medical investigations and earlier psychiatric consultations. These factors seemed to suggest that panic disorder is a more severe illness than generalised anxiety disorder.
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PMID:Panic disorder in Singapore: clinical features and comparisons with generalised anxiety disorder. 920 72

DACA, also known as XR5000, is an acridine derivative active against both topoisomerase I and II. In this phase I study, DACA was given as a 3-h intravenous infusion on 3 successive days, repeated every 3 weeks. A total of 41 patients were treated at 11 dose levels between 9 mg m(-2) d(-1) and the maximum tolerated dose of 800 mg m(-2) day(-1). The commonest, and dose-limiting, toxicity was pain in the infusion arm. One patient given DACA through a central venous catheter experienced chest pain with transient electrocardiogram changes, but no evidence of myocardial infarction. At the highest dose levels, several patients also experienced flushing, pain and paraesthesia around the mouth, eyes and nose and a feeling of agitation. Other side-effects, such as nausea and vomiting, myelosuppression, stomatitis and alopecia, were uncommon. There was one minor response but no objective responses. DACA pharmacokinetics were linear and did not differ between days 1 and 3. The pattern of toxicity seen with DACA is unusual and appears related to the mode of delivery. It is possible that higher doses of DACA could be administered using a different schedule of administration.
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PMID:Phase I and pharmacokinetic study of DACA (XR5000): a novel inhibitor of topoisomerase I and II. CRC Phase I/II Committee. 1046 97


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