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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Acivicin, an L-glutamine antagonist, was administered to 37 evaluable patients with refractory advanced solid tumors in a phase I trial. A total of 67 evaluable 72-hr iv infusions were given at 3- to 4-week intervals. Doses ranged from 3.0 to 90 mg/m2/course. Reversible CNS toxicity was dose-limiting and included lethargy, somnolence, anxiety,
hallucinations
, and paranoid psychoses. Four of five patients experienced unacceptable CNS toxicity at 90 mg/m2. Three of eight patients experienced reversible diaphoresis and chills without fever at 75 mg/m2, and two had
dizziness
and ataxia. Hematopoietic toxicity, nausea, emesis, and diarrhea were mild and dose-related. One patient developed a blue-green discoloration of the infusion arm. Serial plasma and urine specimens from 13 patients were assayed for acivicin using a microbiologic method. Peak plasma levels at the end of the 72-hr infusions correlated with dose and ranged from 0.09 to 1.10 microgram/ml. When data from six patients were fitted to a two-compartment open model, alpha-half-life ranged from 1.1 to 63 mins, while beta-half-life ranged fro 338 to 629 mins. Renal clearance ranged from 6 to 24 mL/min, and nonrenal clearance accounted for 58%-83% of the total drug clearance. CNS toxicity correlated with plasma acivicin levels which exceeded 0.9 microgram/ml for greater than 16 hrs, but not with peak plasma levels or with the integrals of the concentration x time curves. Minor responses were seen in one patient with melanoma, in one with epidermoid pulmonary carcinoma, and in two with colon carcinoma. A starting dose of 60 mg/m2/course was recommended for phase II trials, with possible escalation to 75 mg/m2 in the second course if the drug was well-tolerated.
...
PMID:Phase I trial and pharmacokinetics of acivicin administered by 72-hour infusion. 687 83
Double-blind administration of a single intramuscular dose of 1.5, 2.0, 2.5, or 3.0 mg levonantradol or placebo to 56 patients with moderate to severe postoperative or trauma pain showed significant analgesic effects of each dose of levonantradol as compared to placebo (P less than 0.05). However, no significant dose response was observed. Compared to 2/16 patients on placebo, 23/40 patients (57 per cent) on levonantradol reported one or more side effect. Drowsiness was most frequent. Dry mouth,
dizziness
, "weird dreams," mild
hallucinations
, nervousness, apprehension and confusion occurred less frequently. Changes in resting heart rate and blood pressure were minor and general acceptability was good.
...
PMID:Evaluation of intramuscular levonantradol and placebo in acute postoperative pain. 702 91
Early reports on space exploration suggested that cosmonauts and astronauts sustained "motion sickness" symptoms described as "dizziness, nausea, vomiting, flashes of light, formed
hallucinations
or illusions of inversion of image in space."
Hallucinations
may be due to many causes but most of the above symptoms were similar to those experienced by some patients with expanding intracranial lesions whose symptomatology was referable to the temporoparieto-occipital cortex of the brain. On the basis of our observations, it is suggested that the term "motion sickness" might be applied to earthly symptoms of
dizziness
, nausea, and vomiting--such as encountered ascending in an elevator or tossing about on the sea--for they are primarily related to the inner ear, the peripheral or end organ. However, when inversion of body image and formed and unformed visual
hallucinations
are superimposed upon these, there must be interpretation by the temporoparieto-occipital cortex and this might be designed as "motion sickness in space."
...
PMID:Motion sickness: part I--a theory. 736 50
Man has always been intrigued with the localization of function within the brain but has paid insufficient attention to the long and the short association fiber pathways which, when stimulated, may fire distant areas evoking unusual responses. Three cases of intracerebral lesions are presented to demonstrate the significance of these structures. The vestibular symptoms of
dizziness
may occur from excitation of the temporal operculum. If, added to this symptom, the patient has spatial disorientation, such as feeling upside down, it suggests that the region of the supramarginal gyrus and the angular gyrus are involved. When unformed visual
hallucinations
(such as flashes of light) or formed
hallucinations
(such as distorted images) are present the occipital and midtemporal regions of the brain, respectively, are considered to be the sources of such responses. The symptoms described above were reminiscent of those experienced by some of the cosmonauts and astronauts and it called the authors' attention to this "motion sickness in space." The areas from which such responses may be elicited are the temporoparieto-occipital regions, which are nourished by the posterior cerebral artery and its branches. Vascular insufficiency to this area by spasm of the vessel may be responsible for this symptomatology.
...
PMID:Motion sickness: part II--a clinical study based on surgery of cerebral hemisphere lesions. 736 51
Three patients who had large, benign cerebellar tumors were operated upon in the sitting position and developed symptoms referable to the temporoparieto-occipital region of the brain 24-48 h postoperatively. They consisted of
dizziness
, nausea, vomiting, formed and unformed
hallucinations
, and inversion of image or disorientation in space, some of which were experienced by some of the astronauts and cosmonauts during space flight. Such findings are not due to stimulation of the cerebellum, the site of the lesion, but must come from the cerebral hemisphere. The symptoms were believed to be caused by "the luxury perfusion" of Lassen with the development of local lactic acidosis secondary to vascular insufficiency to the brain in the distribution of the posterior cerebral artery thus stimulating the temporoparieto-occipital region. This theory is suggested to some degree by the work of Endo et al. using CT scans, which showed the shifting of increased blood flow from the frontal region to the temporoparieto-occipital region following removal of a benign posterior fossa tumor. The mechanism for the compression of the posterior cerebral artery may be due to uncal herniation at the tentorium. The authors believe that it might be well to consider further testing in a vertical or oblique plane rather than only in a centrifugal horizontal one. This method would tend to cause uncal herniation more readily. Monitoring of such effects could be done with the colored CT scan.
...
PMID:Motion sickness: part III--a clinical study based on surgery of posterior fossa tumors. 736 52
Timolol has become so populat with ophthalmologists that it is prescribed 44% of the time when an anti-glaucoma drop is needed. This popularity is due to its newness and the publicity it has received, its effectiveness in most types of glaucoma, and the apparent scarcity of side effects. This paper looks at the first 489 patients treated with timolol at Wills Eye Hospital and the side effects encountered. These include blurring of vision, burning and pain, bradycardia and heart failure,
hallucinations
, dilated pupils, headaches,
dizziness
, hypotony, allergy, asthma, impotence, drowsiness, anxiety, emotional lability, and nausea.
...
PMID:The place of timolol in the practice of ophthalmology. 740 91
Data from three placebo-controlled and 11 active-controlled studies of tizanidine were combined to permit analysis of the subsets, which were too small to evaluate within the individual studies. Overall analysis of placebo-controlled data confirms the effectiveness of tizanidine in reducing muscle tone in patients with spasticity of spinal cord origin. Subset analyses suggest that patients with more severe spasticity are more likely to respond, but age, sex, and race were not predictive of response. Comparisons of tizanidine with active controls showed no differences in efficacy compared with baclofen or diazepam. However, when compared with controls, patients treated with tizanidine did not experience increased weakness. Furthermore, patients tolerated tizanidine better than the control medications. More patients experienced adverse events during tizanidine treatment than did patients receiving placebo. The most common adverse events reported were dry mouth, somnolence, asthenia, and
dizziness
. Mild elevations in liver function tests were noted occasionally, but improved in all patients with dose reduction or withdrawal. Three patients from the double-blind database reported formed visual
hallucinations
. All three cleared; two continued tizanidine, and one discontinued.
...
PMID:Summary of combined clinical analysis of controlled clinical trials with tizanidine. 797 13
Drugs part in traffic accidents is not well known. We attempted to specify it taking out of pawn the adverse effects which could be liable: drowsiness; consciousness lose;
dizziness
; eye-sight troubles;
hallucinations
, hearing troubles; drunken feelings, behaviour modification; propensy to suicide, interference with alcohol. Drugs involving such effects were indexed; their therapeutic indications and their chemical structure were taking into account. Statistical classical count allowed us to quantify relative importance of this ten adverse effects category. Multivariate analysis worked out structuration this undesirable effects into 97 different profiles by the mean of the Minimum Spanning Tree method and established proximity links between the 409 active principles recorded. This results are reported here.
...
PMID:[Multiparameter approach to undesirable effects of drugs that may represent risk for the automobile driving]. 821 19
We present a 81-year old male who developed dementia, gait disturbance and right hemiparesis. He was well until the age of 74 when he developed a hemorrhagic infarction in the right occipital region, which left him left homonymous hemianopsia. One year later he had one TIA attack consisting of
dizziness
, headache, and some clouding of consciousness. At that time, atrial fibrillation was found. At age 79, he was attacked by right hemiparesis. Cranial CT scans revealed a lesion consistent with a hemorrhagic infarct in the left middle cerebral artery territory. Two months prior to his final admission, he had a gradual onset of forgetfulness, labile affect, nocturnal agitation and
hallucination
which were followed by gait disturbance and urinary incontinence. On admission, he was alert but moderately demented. In addition he showed difficulty in repetition, limb kinetic and ideomotor apraxia of the left hand indicative of sympathetic apraxia, and constructional apraxia bilaterally. Granial nerves appeared intact except for left homonymous hemianopsia. His gait was wide-based and small stepped. No weakness or ataxia was noted. Deep reflexes were diminished on the left side. Plantar reflex was equivocally extensor of the left. Light touch and pain was slightly diminished on the right side. Cranial CT scans revealed a large low density area in the left fronto-temporo-parietal region. Also ventricular dilatation, diffuse low density change in the subcortical white matter, and diffuse cortical atrophy were seen. His clinical course was complicated by melena, anemia, pneumonia, cardiac failure and renal failure. He expired 2 months after his admission.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A 81-year-old man with dementia, gait disturbance, hemiparesis, and sympathetic apraxia]. 833 25
We report a rare case of relapsing polychondritis with an initial symptom of inner ear involvement. This 53-year-old Japanese man experienced a hearing difficulty, tinnitus in both ears, and
dizziness
of sudden onset, but lacked auricular chondritis at that time, which is the most frequent finding in relapsing polychondritis. Thus it was difficult to reach a correct diagnosis. Steroid therapy, with oral prednisolone 15 mg daily, was effective. Almost two months after we began the steroid therapy, the patient complained of losing interest in his work and reported a
hallucination
vision on the TV screen, so the dose of prednisolone was decreased to 10 mg. The
hallucinations
then disappeared, but the serum level of C-reactive protein increased highly. To reduce the dose of prednisolone, we tried low-dose oral methotrexate. However, we had to discontinue it when the patient experienced severe vomiting and diarrhoea. As adjuvant therapy, we then administered Sho-saiko-to, Chinese herbal medicines with few side effects. Symptoms and laboratory abnormalities then improved markedly.
...
PMID:Relapsing polychondritis presented as inner ear involvement. 872 1
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