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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Management of tuberculosis in a hospital environment is well systematized and may include chemoprophylaxis, which may be hazardous when used in psychiatric impairments. We examined retrospectively adverse events occurring during a 6-month period of antituberculosis treatment. Besides patients initially treated for active pulmonary tuberculosis, 16 other patients have benefited from chemoprophylaxis with isoniazid (
INH
) and/or rifampicin (RFP). All these patients (mean age 53 years) had been institutionalized for several years. Fifteen of them still received a mean of 5.4 +/- 2.2 drugs including 3.3 +/- 1.4 psychotropic agents. During antituberculous treatment, 5 patients (29 per cent) presented side effects: hyperuricaemia with pyrazinamide, neutropenia,
dysphagia
and anorexia, dizziness and falls, diabetes and fatal fulminant hepatitis associated with
INH
. Drug interactions were systemically searched for. Three probably led to clinical manifestations: they implicated
INH
with carbamazepine, RFP with theophylline and RFP with haloperidol. Our results suggest a greater sensitivity for adverse effects and drug interactions in psychiatric institutionalized patients. They pose the problem of the appropriateness of antituberculous chemoprophylaxis in such patients, particularly because of communication difficulties and polytherapy. The
INH
-RFP regimen should be avoided and the clinical and biological follow-up reinforced.
...
PMID:[Adverse effects related to the use of antitubercular drugs in psychiatric centers: retrospective study at the Philippe Pinel CH in Amiens 1994]. 913 90
This case is a 56-year old woman. Steroids were being administered perorally after a thymectomy for myasthenia gravis. A fever of 38-39 degrees Celsius appeared during night, an abnormal shadow showed up on a chest X-ray and the patient was hospitalized. Gaffky No. 2 acid-fast bacilli were detected in the patient's sputum and the chest CT showed diffuse granular-like shadow, the patient was diagnosed as miliary tuberculosis and treatment with combined use of
INH
, RFP, EB, and PZA was started. Subsequently, fever started to subside and the miliary shadow on chest X-ray improved, however, six weeks after the start of treatment, hoarseness and
dysphagia
appeared. From the cervical CT and cervical angiography findings, the diagnosis of right subclavian artery impending ruptured aneurysm was made. Because the patient's sputum was acid-fast bacilli positive and because the patient had undergone thymectomy, it was decided that it would be difficult to treat her by a thoracotomy again. Therefore, a right subclavian artery stent insertion, right subclavian artery-right common carotid artery bypass creation operation was carried out with the objective of blocking the flow of blood to the aneurysm. The hoarseness and
dysphagia
improved post-operatively and the patient's progress is being monitored. Tuberculous aneurysms are a rare affection and they are mostly discovered when the autopsy is done, however, this case was diagnosed due to the manifestation of subjective symptoms. While this case was not diagnosed histopathologically, it is envisaged from the clinical progress that this was a tuberculous subclavian aneurysm complicated during the treatment for miliary tuberculosis.
...
PMID:[A case of tuberculous aneurysm of subclavian artery occurred in the course of treatment for miliary tuberculosis]. 1737 20
Esophageal tuberculosis is rare, constituting about 0.3% of gastrointestinal tuberculosis. It presents commonly with
dysphagia
, cough, chest pain in addition to fever and weight loss. Complications may include hemorrhage from the lesion, development of arterioesophageal fistula, esophagocutaneous fistula or tracheoesophageal fistula. There are very few reports of esophageal tuberculosis presenting with hematemesis due to ulceration. We report a patient with hematemesis that was due to the erosion of tuberculous subcarinal lymph nodes into the esophagus. A 15-year-old boy presented with hemetemesis as his only complaint. Esophagogastroduodenoscopy (EGD) revealed an eccentric ulcerative lesion involving 50% of circumference of the esophagus. Biopsy showed caseating epitheloid granulomas with lymphocytic infiltrates suggestive of tuberculosis. Computerised tomography of the thorax revealed thickening of the mid-esophagus with enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes in the subcarinal region compressing the esophagus along with moderate right sided pleural effusion. Patient was treated with anti-tuberculosis therapy (Rifampicin,
Isoniazid
, Pyrazinamide, Ethambutol) for 6 mo. Repeat EGD showed scarring and mucosal tags with complete resolution of the esophageal ulcer.
...
PMID:Esophageal tuberculosis presenting with hematemesis. 2425 51
SETTING:
Treatment outcomes in multidrug-resistant tuberculosis (MDR-TB) are poor. Due to drug toxicity and a long treatment duration, approximately half of patients are treated successfully. Medication is often crushed for patients who have
difficulty swallowing
whole tablets. Whether crushing tablets affects drug exposure in MDR-TB treatment is not known.
OBJECTIVE AND DESIGN:
We performed a sequential pharmacokinetic study in patients aged >18 years on MDR-TB treatment at two hospitals in Cape Town, South Africa. We compared the bioavailability of pyrazinamide, moxifloxacin, isoniazid (
INH
), ethambutol and terizidone when the tablets were crushed and mixed with water before administration vs. swallowed whole. We sampled blood at six time points over 10 h under each condition separated by 2 weeks. Non-compartmental analysis was used to derive the key pharmacokinetic measurements.
RESULTS:
Twenty participants completed the study: 15 were men, and the median age was 31.5 years. There was a 42% reduction in the area under the curve AUC
0-10
of
INH
when the tablets were crushed compared with whole tablets (geometric mean ratio 58%; 90%CI 47-73). Crushing tablets of pyrazinamide, moxifloxacin, ethambutol and terizidone did not affect the bioavailability significantly.
CONCLUSION:
We recommend that crushing of
INH
tablets in the MDR-TB treatment regimen be avoided. Paediatric
INH
formulations may be a viable alternative if the crushing of
INH
tablets is indicated.
...
PMID:Effect of tablet crushing on drug exposure in the treatment of multidrug-resistant tuberculosis. 3162 71