Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013395 (dyspepsia)
4,879 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

48 patients with rheumatic diseases underwent long-term treatment with a new antirheumatic compound, tolfenamic acid pINN. The dosage was 2 capsules of 100 mg 3 times daily. At the time of summing-up 9 patients had been treated for one year, 41 for 6 months and 7 had been eliminated after 1 month of treatment, because of side-effects in the form of diarrhoea, dyspepsia, vomiting and 1 ulcer patient got an attack of duodenal ulcer. Of the 41 patients who completed the 6 month trial 33 reported good therapeutic effect. A significant fall in the erythrocyte sedimentation reaction (p less than 0.01) was observed. 19 patients reported side-effects in the trial period, but at the end of the trial only 5 complained of side-effects. In the male patients occasional slight dysuria was the most common side-effect. Of the 9 patients who were treated for one year all reported a good effect from the preparation and none of them complained of side-effects after 1 year of treatment. Apart from eosinophilia in 2 patients, who were eliminated from the trial because of diarrhoea, none of the laboratory values showed any signs of the preparation having any toxic effects.
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PMID:Long-term therapy with tolfenamic acid pINN. A clinical and toxicological study with special reference to clinical and chemical laboratory parameters. 30 10

A 40-year old cattle feeder has been suffering from indigestion, leukocytosis and conspicuous eosinophilia for about 4 years. A sample of liver tissue was taken during gastrectomy and multiple allergic granulomas rich in eosinophilia leukocytes were found. Toxocara canis was identified in serial sections outside the granulomas. Larval toxocariasis was confirmed by a high level of specific antibodies which failed to decrease even after administration of Mintezol antithelmintic. In this country, there was serological proof of 287 cases of larval toxocariasis till July 1982. This is the first finding of Toxocara larvae in liver biopsy published in Czechoslovak literature. Another finding of liver Toxocara larvae was made in a 86-year old woman included among 4 cases of allergic granulomatosis of the liver published before.
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PMID:[Larval toxocariasis in a 40-year-old man with detection of larvae in a liver biopsy]. 666 84

Fifty-two of 142 (37%) American ex-prisoners of war that worked on the Burma-Thailand Railroad during World War II were found to have previously unrecognized symptomatic Strongyloides stercoralis infections. A characteristic urticarial creeping skin eruption on the abdomen, buttocks and thighs occurred in 92%. Infection was also associated with pruritus ani, abdominal pain, indigestion, heartburn, and diarrhea. Demonstration of larvae in ether-formalin stool concentrates in these chronic low density infections required 5 hours of microscopy per case to detect 90% of positive cases. Therapy with thiabendazole resulted in a clinical cure in 93% and a microscopic cure in 100%; but was associated with frequent side effects. Chronic strongyloidiasis should be considered in veterans of Far East conflicts and in others with intimate soil contact in rural Strongyloides stercoralis-endemic areas who present with recurrent creeping skin eruption, abdominal pain, and eosinophilia.
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PMID:Chronic strongyloidiasis in World War II Far East ex-prisoners of war. 669 84

Classical eosinophilic gastroenteritis is a rare disease but may be misdiagnosed in clinical practice. We report eosinophilic gastroenteritis that was diagnosed in six patients (four males and two females; mean age 31.5 years) using standard criteria (presence of gastrointestinal symptoms, a predominant eosinophilic infiltrate on biopsy, and exclusion of other causes of eosinophilia). All had gastric mucosal disease and presented with dyspepsia. The median duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis was three months (range five weeks to 13 years). Epigastric pain or discomfort was the most common symptom (100%) followed by anorexia, nausea, and vomiting (67%, 67% and 33%, respectively). None had diarrhea. Half the patients had a history of allergy, while 67% had peripheral eosinophilia. All responded to oral steroids within two months; one third needed to continue on a small dose of maintenance steroids to remain in remission. A high degree of suspicion and biopsy at upper endoscopy is necessary for diagnosis of this rare disease.
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PMID:Dyspepsia due to eosinophilic gastroenteritis. 939 13

We present two rare cases of unusual manifestations of Taenia solium infestation. Taenia infestation usually causes abdominal pain and diarrhea in humans. But there have been no clinical reports of ascites, chronic diarrhea, and malabsorption due to Taenia solium without evidence of the ova or larvae of the parasites in stool examinations. Our first unusual case was in a 30-year-old woman with spontaneous pneumothorax, pleural effusion, and ascites; the second case was in a 67-year-old man with a 3-year history of diarrhea, weight loss, and indigestion. Both patients showed blood eosinophilia and positive serologic tests for Taenia solium. After antiparasitic agent administration, their symptoms resolved successfully.
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PMID:Unusual manifestations of Taenia solium infestation. 1506 8

Treatment of strongyloidiasis has been traditionally based on thiabendazole, despite its frequent gastrointestinal side effects and failure to achieve eradication of the parasite from faeces in approximately 30% of cases. Ivermectin has been shown to be more effective for treating chronic uncomplicated strongyloidiasis. The efficacy and tolerability of these drugs in a series of patients treated from 1999 to 2002 at the Oliva Health Centre, Valencia, Spain, are reported. A total of 88 patients diagnosed of strongyloidiasis were treated using the following regimens: thiabendazole 25 mg/kg/12 h for 3 consecutive days in 31 patients; ivermectin 200 mug/kg as a single dose in 22 patients; and ivermectin 200 mug/kg for 2 consecutive days in 35 patients. The efficacy and side effects were recorded. A total of 65 patients were male, and 23 female. The mean age was 64 +/- 12 years. Of the patients, 44 had worked barefoot in rice fields. Among the 31 patients treated with thiabendazole, 25 (78%) met the criteria for cure (the absence of parasite in faeces after examination of three samples collected on alternate days), and 5 (16%) experienced side effects (asthenia, epigastralgia and disorientation). Of the 22 patients treated with ivermectin on a single day, 17 (77%) met the criteria for cure, and 2 (9%) reported side effects (dizziness, dyspepsia). Among the 35 patients treated with ivermectin on 2 consecutive days, 100% met the criteria for cure, and 0% experienced side effects. In chronic uncomplicated strongyloidiasis, a treatment regimen consisting of ivermectin 200 mug/kg for 2 consecutive days provided the best results with regard to efficacy and tolerability. When the eosinophilia continued after treatment, we observed a high percentage of not-cure rate (7 of 9 patients, 77%).
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PMID:Efficacy and safety of ivermectin and thiabendazole in the treatment of strongyloidiasis. 1557 78

Both eosinophils and mast cells have been implicated in the generation of abdominal pain. The purposes of this retrospective study were to determine the prevalence of duodenal eosinophilia in pediatric dyspepsia and to determine the clinical response rate of these patients to combined H1 and H2 receptor antagonist and mast cell stabilizer therapy. Fifty-nine patients (ages 3.5-17.7 years) with dyspepsia undergoing endoscopy were evaluated. All patients had a minimum of 2 forceps biopsies obtained from each of the esophagus, antrum, and duodenal bulb. Routine histologic evaluation was performed and duodenal biopsies were additionally evaluated to determine eosinophil counts. Patients with > 10 eosinophils/hpf were treated with ranitidine and hydroxyzine (H1/H2). Nonresponders were then treated with oral cromolyn. Patients were followed up and response recorded in an abdominal pain database and/or medical chart, which were reviewed for this study. Forty-two patients (71%) had duodenal eosinophilia. Twenty-one (50%) of these were responders to H1/H2. The response rate did not differ between patients with and without noneosinophilic esophagitis, gastritis, or duodenitis, respectively. Two patients were lost to follow-up and considered nonresponders. Seventeen of the remaining 19 (89%) were responders to cromolyn. Overall, the response rate to this treatment pathway was 90%. Duodenal eosinophilia is common in pediatric patients with dyspepsia. These patients appear to be clinically amenable to combination H1/H2 therapy and/or oral cromolyn.
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PMID:Mucosal eosinophilia and response to H1/H2 antagonist and cromolyn therapy in pediatric dyspepsia. 1652 34

Eosinophilic gastroenteritis is a rare and heterogeneous disease that is probably misdiagnosed in clinical practice because it meets a high degree of suspicion, and an endoscopy with biopsy is needed for diagnosis. The authors describe, with a brief thematic review, a case of eosinophilic gastroenteritis presenting as dyspepsia syndrome and mild peripheral eosinophilia.
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PMID:[Eosinophilic gastroenteritis: a rare case of dyspepsia]. 1918 95

Eosinophilic gastroenteritis (EG) is an uncommon disease characterized by focal or diffuse eosinophilic infiltration of the gastrointestinal tract, and is usually associated with dyspepsia, diarrhea and peripheral eosinophilia. Diffuse gastrointestinal tract and colonic involvement are uncommon. The endoscopic appearance may vary from normal to mucosal nodularity and ulceration. Gastrointestinal obstruction is unusual and is associated with predominantly muscular disease. We present five unusual cases of EG associated with gastric outlet and duodenal obstruction. Two cases presented with acute pancreatitis and one had a history of pancreatitis. Four cases responded well to medical therapy and one had recurrent gastric outlet obstruction that required surgery. Four out of the five cases had endoscopic and histological evidence of esophagitis and two had colitis. Two patients had ascites. These cases reaffirm that EG is a disorder with protean manifestations and may involve the entire gastrointestinal tract. Gastric outlet and/or small bowel obstruction is an important though uncommon presentation of EG. It may also present as esophagitis, gastritis with polypoid lesions, ulcers or erosions, colitis and pancreatitis and may mimic malignancy.
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PMID:Unusual presentations of eosinophilic gastroenteritis: case series and review of literature. 1941 90

Functional dyspepsia is a highly prevalent but heterogeneous disorder; multiple pathogenetic mechanisms are likely involved but the underlying causal pathways in functional dyspepsia remain obscure. The term functional dyspepsia was popularized by the famed Walter Alvarez at the Mayo Clinic early last century. Prominent Australian gastroenterologists who have contributed to our understanding of functional dyspepsia include Peter Baume, Barry Marshall, Douglas Piper, Nick Talley, John Kellow, and Gerald Holtmann. Specific dyspeptic symptoms have not generally correlated very well with any particular physiologic disturbance, although gastric disaccommodation and duodenal eosinophilia have been linked to early satiety in this condition. Genetic markers have been tentatively identified, and functional dyspepsia can follow bacterial gastroenteritis. No objective diagnostic tools for functional dyspepsia are currently agreed upon, although meal induction of symptoms appears reproducible and may have diagnostic utility. The symptomatic criteria for functional dyspepsia (Rome III criteria) are based on expert consensus and the exclusion of organic causes. Various therapeutic modalities for functional dyspepsia have been explored; however, empirical approaches are still employed for the treatment of functional dyspepsia. Better approaches for functional dyspepsia are likely to follow an improved understanding of the underlying pathophysiological abnormalities.
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PMID:Whither dyspepsia? A historical perspective of functional dyspepsia, and concepts of pathogenesis and therapy in 2009. 1979 94


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