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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (
dizziness
)
9,689
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A double-blind random study compared lorazepam with diazepam as i.m. premedicants in 84 healthy women undergoing uterine curettage. Anxiety, assessed by a self-rating test by the patient and by a trained observer, was reduced 90 min after both lorazepam (P less than 0.001) and diazepam (P less than 0.01). There was more sedation and a longer recovery time after lorazepam than after diazepam. Amnesia at 24 h after operation (lack of recall rather than lack of recognition) was greater after lorazepam. There was transient local discomfort at the site of the injection in most patients in both groups, but no serious effects. Local erythema was present in 12 patients who received lorazepam and 10 who received diazepam 90 min after the injection, disappearing after 24 h in the former group but remaining in the latter. The incidence of nausea, vomiting and headache in both groups was small and similar, but there was more
restlessness
and
dizziness
after diazepam in the early recovery period.
...
PMID:Comparison of lorazepam and diazepam as premedicants. 2 39
Ten patients, suffering from affective disorders, were treated with carbamazepine for polyuria and polydipsia associated with long-term lithium therapy. Oral carbamazepine (300--600 mg daily for six weeks) was observed to have no beneficial effect in alleviating these symptoms when compared with placebo tablets in a double blind crossover study. Plasma and urinary osmolality were observed to be within normal range in these patients and there was no antidiuretic response following subcutaneous Pitressin injection. There was 50% drop-out due to severe side-effects like ataxia,
dizziness
,
restlessness
and confusional states. It appears that lithium exacerbates carbamazepine induced CNS side-effects or vice versa, the mechanism of which is not very clear. It may be due to their mutual effect on sodium metabolism or on nervous conduction velocity. Hence, simultaneous administration of these two drugs should preferably be avoided.
...
PMID:Effect of carbamazepine in polyuria associated with lithium therapy. 36 Feb 49
In a comparative study, two groups of patients suffering from bronchial asthma or chronic obstructive bronchitis were tested with the new broncholytic substance 7-(3-[2/24/k-dihydroxyphenyl-2-hydroxy-ethylamino]-propyl)-theophylline (reproterol, Bronchspasmin) versus the well proven drug orciprenaline. Both preparations were administered for four weeks in doses of 3 x 20 mg/day (some patients received 6 x 10 mg/day). Different variables of the lung function were examined twice weekly prior to and 1 hr following ingestion of the substance (FVC, FEV1, Rt, IGV, Palpha02). On the basis of findings in above variables, both reproterol and orciprenaline showed very good and significant broncholytic effects. The efficacy of reproterol, however, proved to be significantly superior to that of orciprenaline. This also has been confirmed in subjective reports of patients with regard to strength and duration of alleviation of their respiratory distress. Palpitation, slight tremor of the fingers,
restlessness
, pressure in the head and
dizziness
were mentioned as side effects. These symptoms occurred fairly often with orciprenaline, but relatively seldom with reproterol. This difference between the preparations was highly significant. Following four weeks of administration, no tachyphylaxis was observed. In view of the submitted results, reproterol represents, no doubt, a considerable addition to the presently available therapeutic collection of remedies for the treatment of obstructive airways diseases.
...
PMID:[The bronchdilating action of reproterol in patients with bronchial asthma and chronic obstructive bronchitis (author's transl)]. 57 33
A review of the safety and tolerability of fluvoxamine in worldwide marketing studies involving 24,624 patients, predominantly receiving fluvoxamine treatment in uncontrolled studies in depression, has been conducted. There was a marked preponderance of female patients and patients aged between 30 and 50 years. The majority of patients were treated for 6 weeks, with the most frequent modal total daily dose being 100mg. The greatest proportion of adverse experiences occurring, by COSTART body system, affected the digestive system (24.1%), the nervous system (23.7%), and the body as a whole (15.3%). The only adverse experience with an incidence greater than 10% was nausea (15.7%), with somnolence (6.9%) and asthenia (6.2%) as the next most frequent experiences. Notably, the rates of
agitation
and anxiety were only 1.4 and 1.3%, respectively. The incidences of adverse experiences increased with age, and were slightly higher in females than males. 15.1% of patients discontinued treatment prematurely as a result of adverse experiences, principally nausea,
dizziness
, vomiting, somnolence, abdominal pain, and headache. The overall incidence of serious adverse events associated with fluvoxamine treatment was 2.5%, and the incidence of overall suicidality, including suicidal ideation, overdose, and intentional overdose as well as attempted and completed acts of suicide, was remarkably low at 0.8%.
...
PMID:Review of fluvoxamine safety database. 137 74
Memantine is a 1-amino-adamantane derivative which has been proposed to be useful in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. Its beneficial effect has been related to its novel properties as an NMDA receptor blocker which can neutralize the effect of glutamate at striatal and subthalamic levels. In the present study, conducted in an open-fashion, 14 parkinsonian patients with motor fluctuations taking L-dopa, were given a supplement of memantine 30 mg/day. After one month, 10 patients completed the treatment (4 discontinued it due to abdominal pain,
psychomotor agitation
, confusion and
dizziness
). In 5 patients, the main parkinsonian features improved significantly (1 point or more on the Webster scale). In 6 patients, "off" episodes improved (from daily mean of 273 minutes, to 172 minutes). In summary, memantine addition to parkinsonian features, could form a basis for novel therapeutic strategies directed to neutralize the effects of glutamate at striatal and subthalamic levels.
...
PMID:Efficacy of memantine, an NMDA receptor antagonist, in the treatment of Parkinson's disease. 138 98
Photosensitivity has proved to be a useful model to study the acute effects of experimental antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). The photosensitivity range is usually diminished or even abolished after administration of a known or experimental AED. An increase in photosensitivity, an unexpected reaction, was found in four photosensitive epileptic patients after oral ingestion of 500, 100, or 50 mg of Org 6370. Moreover, the three patients receiving doses of 100 and 500 mg reported nausea,
dizziness
,
restlessness
, and an increase in spontaneous epileptic seizures (myoclonus and in one patient a generalized tonic-clonic convulsion). The side effects coincided with peak Org 6370 serum levels. Our findings indicate that in the photosensitivity model experimental drugs with proven anticonvulsant properties in animals may increase rather than decrease the degree of patient photosensitivity. Photosensitive patients may represent a special subgroup of epileptic patients and therefore need to be classified as such.
...
PMID:Preliminary assessment of the efficacy of Org 6370 in photosensitive epileptic patients: paradoxical enhancement of photosensitivity and provocation of myoclonic seizures. 173 47
The present paper is part on an extensive follow-up study aimed at the investigation of the effects of in-patient psychotherapy and at the durability of those effects. Using a psychoanalytic oriented personality-inventory (PSKB, Rudolf 1981) 85 phobic patients were examined at the beginning, at the end, and one year after a 6-8 week in-patient psychotherapy. Our results confirmed some of the generally described personality-characteristics in patients with phobia: the phobic symptoms are often accompanied by physical symptoms (sensation of
dizziness
, weakness sensation, palpitation, sleep disturbance, heavy sweating and breathlessness) and psychic symptoms (anxiousness, depression,
restlessness
, reduced self-awareness, pedantry, inhibition of aggressive impulses) which could be influenced by psychotherapy. Furthermore we depicted results which have not yet been published in literature.
...
PMID:[Personality markers of phobic patients and their change in psychotherapy. Descriptive results of a catamnestic project of the effectiveness of 6-9 week inpatient treatment]. 177 Dec 26
Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) stimulates pituitary thyrotropin synthesis and release and also regulates autonomic nervous system functions by acting as a neuromodulator and neurotransmitter. In experimental animals a stimulation of ventilation by thyrotropin-releasing hormone was shown when applied at central nervous system sites that affect respiratory motor output. It was the goal of our study to investigate the respiratory properties of thyrotropin-releasing hormone on basal and stimulated (i.e. CO2-rebreathing) conditions following systemic thyrotropin-releasing hormone application in healthy humans. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone (200 micrograms, 400 micrograms intravenous) initiated a rapid short lasting rise of minute volume, ventilatory air-flow and alveolar oxygen tension under steady state breathing (P less than 0.001). Breathing frequency was less affected, heart rate rose concomitantly (P less than 0.001). While breathing with increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide, minute volume was higher under thyrotropin-releasing hormone than under placebo alone. Further effects (e.g. nausea,
dizziness
, palpitations) mostly appeared later than respiratory changes and thus may not be responsible for their initiation. Our findings prove systemic thyrotropin-releasing hormone to be a strong respiratory stimulant in man. Response in respiratory output was also accompanied by central nervous system-effects (e.g.
dizziness
,
restlessness
, augmented vigilance). The mode of thyrotropin-releasing hormone effects on respiration after peripheral administration is still speculative. An augmented sympathetic output or a direct receptor mediated action at central nervous system sites may be responsible, while a peripheral effect cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:Thyrotropin-releasing hormone has stimulatory effects on ventilation in humans. 190 74
Rare side effects on the central nervous system including
dizziness
,
restlessness
, and even very rare convulsions as reported during the course of antibiotic treatment with quinolones were the topic of a well-controlled in vitro approach. The excitability of brain matter was tested by electrically evoking field potentials in the CA1 region of the rat hippocampus in vitro. Direct effects of nalidixic acid, enoxacin, pefloxacin, norfloxacin, ofloxacin, and ciprofloxacin were found to occur as a dose-dependent increase in amplitude of this field potential, which is in line with the view that the quinolones increase excitability. The highest increase was found with enoxacin and nalidixic acid, and the lowest increase was found with ciprofloxacin. In order to keep the potential risk of the antibiotic therapy as low as possible, ciprofloxacin might be the drug of choice of the quinolones. In contrast to the quinolones, which only increased the amplitudes of electrically evoked potentials, fenbufen induced spontaneous firing in the pyramidal cell layer without stimulation in addition to its dose-dependent effects on the amplitudes of the evoked potentials. Threshold doses of the quinolones tested (0.25 microM) increased the amplitudes of evoked potentials in the presence of an otherwise ineffective concentration of fenbufen (1 microM) to different degrees, ranging from 39.2% for ciprofloxacin to 72.6% for enoxacin.
...
PMID:Hippocampal activity in the presence of quinolones and fenbufen in vitro. 192 56
Anticholinergic syndrome (AS) due to accidental poisoning is exceptional. Mandragora contains a high concentration of atropine, hiosciamine and scopolamine. We have evaluated 15 patients with AS due to poisoning by Mandragora autumnalis, distributed in two family groups. The latency period since the ingestion was 1-4 hours (Means = 2.7 +/- 0.9). The clinical features corresponded to an AS of variable severity. All patients had blurred vision and dryness of mouth, nine (60%) had difficult micturition, nine
dizziness
, nine headache, eight (53%) vomit, two difficult swallowing and two abdominal pain. There was no correlation between the latency period and the clinical severity. Blushing, areactive mydriasis and tachycardia were found in all, dry skin and mucosae in 14 (93%), hyperactivity/hallucination in 14 and
agitation
/delirium in nine (60%). One patient developed a florid psychotic episode. Prostigmine (2-6 mg) was administered to 11 patients and physostigmine (0.5-2 mg) to six. The time until a definite response was observed was variable (3-36 hours). The patients treated with physostigmine had a better reversal of the psychoneurological symptoms. Mandragora was identified intermingled with chard [correction of stalwort] (Beta vulgaris) and spinach (Spinacia oleracea) leaves, and atropine and hiosciamine were identified.
...
PMID:[Atropine poisoning by Mandragora autumnalis. A report of 15 cases]. 208 9
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