Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0013395 (
dyspepsia
)
4,879
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Purpose of this study was to evaluate the activity of dihydroergocristine (DHEC, CAS 17479-19-5) at three different dosages, when administered to aged patients with senile dementia of Alzheimer type. Eighty patients, 48 males and 32 females, aged 55-80 years, affected with senile organic brain syndrome, were admitted to the trial. Clinical evaluation was made by SCAG (Sandoz Clinical Assessment Geriatric Scale). Inclusion criteria considered patients presenting at the basal evaluation a total SCAG score between 60 and 90, with stressed impairment of cognitive function. All the patients were divided in four groups and treated with DHEC 1.5, 3, 6 mg/d or placebo for three months. The evaluation of the total SCAG score demonstrated a significant activity of the drug compared vs placebo, and a dose-related effect. Also for the single clusters it was demonstrated a significant (p < 0.05) dose/effect relation, except for the "affective" one; on the contrary "cognitive functioning" cluster displayed the best benefit. The drug was very well tolerated, as only some cases of
dyspepsia
, mild
gastralgia
and nausea were reported in some patients.
...
PMID:[Dihydroergocristine in the treatment of organic brain psychosyndrome. Dose-finding study against placebo]. 149 61
Twenty patients, 7 males, 13 females, age range 27-69, average 46 years, with highly painful and inflammatory osteo-articular pathology were treated with a nabumetone preparation (one 1 g capsule at night before going to bed), for a minimum of 6 and a maximum of 10 days (average 9.70 days). Already during the first days of treatment, pain and joint function were improved and reactive edema diminished. The authors believe the drug to have a preventive analgesic effect which may at first consist in an increased pain threshold at the level of capsular receptors and may subsequently involve algoreceptors situated in the tendons. In addition to its analgesic efficacy, the drug has the advantage of being easy to handle neither general nor local side effects were observed. Only two patients complained of digestive side effects (
dyspepsia
and minor
gastric pain
in one case;
gastric pain
and vomiting in the other: both leading to withdrawal of the drug after 6 days). Five patients had excellent results, 9 reported good results, in 5 the result was fair.
...
PMID:[Analgesic and anti-inflammatory effect of nabumetone in osteo-articular diseases in the acute phase]. 214 82
Selected results are presented of studies of diarrhea and its treatment carried out in Guatemala in 1985-1987 and of qualitative studies of child feeding especially during and after diarrhea conducted in 1988-89 by the Nutrition Institute of Central America and Panama (INCAP). This work focuses on ethnoclassification and the role of breast feeding in diarrheal disease, the possibilities and limitations of the common Latin American system of classification into hot or cold properties as an explanatory model for diarrhea, and implications of the findings for public health programs. In the diarrhea studies, 15-20 randomly selected mothers of children under 5 were interviewed in 4 communities of about 1000 inhabitants in both indigenous and Ladino communities. Interviews were also conducted with curanderos, midwives, and other traditional health care providers. The dietary information on children with diarrhea came from focus groups with mothers in 3 marginal urban communities, 3 rural indigenous communities, and 4 rural Ladino communities. Biomedical practice and popular beliefs both consider alterations in the frequency or consistency of stools and
stomach pain
to be part of the definition of diarrhea. But the mothers viewed diarrhea as either an illness in itself, or 1 symptom of another illness defined by traditional practice such as "empacho" (
indigestion
) or evil eye, or as a normal accompaniment of changes in child growth and development such as loss of teeth or the 1st steps or words. Diarrhea caused by the mother's mild is believed to be a distinct type that occurs when the milk becomes very cold or hot in the folk classification, or when it is disturbed. Illnesses are viewed as violations of the equilibrium between hot and cold in the diet, activities, emotions, or general state of the nursing mother. Women are considered in a state of cold for about 40 days after birth and should follow specific recommendations for diet, activity, and personal care. Lactation is considered a hot state, and women should continue to consume hot foods to overcome the cold of the postpartum. Lactating women should avoid foods considered very hot, such as coffee, chile, and spicy foods. Strong maternal emotions such as anger or fright are also believed to affect the milk. Treatment may follow various forms depending on the suspected cause, and may include dietary change, consumption of a home or commercial remedy, or complete weaning. Public health programs should take local health systems into account, encouraging favorable prescribed practices such as postpartum rest and attention to the maternal diet. Specific advice to the mother may vary, but health education should maintain the integrated focus on the women that is part of the traditional system.
...
PMID:[Breast feeding in the etiology of diarrhea]. 249 Aug 82
Copper refinery workers exposed to selenium were studied before, during, and after a shutdown period. Urine selenium levels were 83 +/- 30 mumol/mol creatinine and 69 +/- 27 mumol/mol creatinine when measured on two occasions during exposure compared with 56 +/- 17 mumol/mol creatinine when the workers had been free of exposure for 10 wk during a shutdown. The refinery workers reported more nose and eye irritation,
indigestion
,
stomach pain
, and fatigue than controls. "Garlic-like" breath odor was reported to be personally and socially offensive by many of the workers. Reporting of symptoms, pulmonary function indices, and laboratory test results did not change with exposure except for hemoglobin level, which rose during the shutdown. Hemoglobin levels were found to be inversely correlated with the urine selenium level, and there was a positive correlation noted for the interactive effect of urine selenium and urine arsenic levels on hemoglobin.
...
PMID:Health status of copper refinery workers with specific reference to selenium exposure. 268 43
The etiology of
gastric pain
is an unsolved riddle, despite nearly a century of research. While much research and many pharmacologic treatment methods have been aimed at controlling acid secretion, the role of acid in reports of pain is unclear. In this study, 30 patients (10 with endoscopically verified duodenal ulcers, 10 with verified nonulcer
dyspepsia
, and 10 healthy volunteers) participated in a double-blind crossover study of the effects of ranitidine on pain reports after an injection of pentagastrin. The results showed that whereas pentagastrin caused a significant increase in gastric secretion, only the patients with nonulcer
dyspepsia
reported any appreciable pain before or after the injection. In addition, they chose more adjectives to describe their pain and reported more symptoms, especially directly after the injection. There were no significant differences between the drug and placebo conditions nor between the ulcer and healthy subjects. The role of acid in reported pain remains unclear.
...
PMID:Blocked and nonblocked acid secretion and reported pain in ulcer, nonulcer dyspepsia, and normal subjects. 236 9
The efficacy of itraconazole was assessed in an open trial in 30 patients with disseminated lesions of pityriasis versicolor confirmed by direct microscopy. The patients were allocated randomly to one of two treatment regimens, 200 mg once daily for 5 days or 100 mg once daily for 10 days. On assessment 3 weeks after the end of the treatment, 25 patients were healed, two patients had mild residual lesions, two had considerable residual lesions and one patient had relapsed. One patient reported
dyspepsia
and one patient reported
stomach ache
. One patient had asymptomatic elevation of serum transaminase (GOT and GPT) but this had returned to normal 3 weeks after the end of therapy.
...
PMID:Itraconazole therapy in pityriasis versicolor. 301 1
Fourty adult patients with coxarthrosis were treated for 30 days with oral diclofenac sodium at the daily dose of 150 mg: 20 of these were administered one 150 mg prolonged-release capsule per day, the other 20 received one 50 mg enteric-coated tablet every 8 hours. The presence and severity of several symptoms and signs (various pain types, cramps, morning stiffness, impaired function capacity), the intensity of pain through the Visual Analogical Scale and some laboratory tests (Erythrocyte Sedimentation Rate, C-reactive protein, Rheuma test) were controlled to monitor drug efficacy. The routine laboratory tests of blood, liver and kidney function, the gastrointestinal tolerance of the two administered formulations and the appearance of any adverse event were controlled to monitor drug tolerability. Both administration schemes yielded very positive results as to treatment efficacy, although the prolonged-release capsule often induced a somewhat quicker response. At the end of the one-month treatment more than half of patients in both groups registered disappearance of several symptoms and a noticeable reduction of the remainder ones. Systemic tolerability was also good, with superimposable results in the two groups; gastrointestinal tolerance on the contrary was better in the recipients of the prolonged-release capsules (2 cases of
dyspepsia
) with respect to those treated with the enteric-coated tablets (2 cases of gastric pyrosis and 2 cases of
gastralgia
). No adverse events were registered.
...
PMID:Open study of a diclofenac sodium prolonged-release in patients suffering from coxarthrosis. 944
The Annual Reports of the Mount Sinai Hospital from the 1850s, and the Mount Sinai Hospital Reports for 1897-1906, make it possible to trace the discharges of gastroenterological inpatients, and (for a few years) of outpatients. Fully computerized diagnostic data have only been available since 1986. In the 19th century, about 20% of the outpatients had digestive disorders, the commonest of which were
gastralgia
/gastritis/
dyspepsia
, gastroenteritis, oropharyngeal complaints and constipation. A similar proportion of inpatients had digestive diagnoses, but the four disorders listed above decreased markedly in the second half of the 19th century, so that by the turn of the century the commonest diseases were typhlitis (appendicitis), hemorrhoids and other anal problems. By the 1990s, digestive diseases accounted for only 5% of total admissions, hepatobiliary diagnoses being the commonest group. Some cancers such as gastric and esophageal showed little change, while colorectal increased markedly. Some newly recognized diseases, such as peptic ulcer, waxed and then waned, while colitis and regional enteritis came and have continued to increase. Other new diagnoses, such as autointoxication and visceroptosis, flashed into prominence and then disappeared totally, presumably because they were nondiseases.
...
PMID:Gastroenterology and hepatology--the diagnostic data. 1067 78
The purpose of this study was to evaluate the intensity of gastric inflammatory changes in atopic patients infected with H. pylori, and to find out whether a long-term exposure to a sensitizing allergen intensified the acuteness of inflammatory changes. The examinations were performed on patients with atopic diathesis who suffered from
dyspepsia
and
gastralgia
. The examined group included 72 women between 16 and 57 years of age (mean age: 36.5 years) and 38 men from 16 to 60 years of age (mean age: 34.4 years). The control group included 40 patients with no traits of atopy (13 men and 27 women between 18 and 56 years old, mean age: 34.8 years) with chronic gastritis confirmed by endoscopic and histopathological tests. All patients were subjected to endoscopy of the upper alimentary tract. Biopsy specimens were taken for histopathological analyses. They were stained with eosin and hematoxylin (the H&E method), and with a modified Giemsa method. The evaluation included the presence of chronic inflammation of gastric mucosa, its activity and intensity. The presence of H. pylori colonization was determined with the use of histopathological method of staining. Significant differences were found concerning inflammation intensity in atopic patients additionally infected with H. pylori, in comparison with the group of patients with food allergy without bacterial colonization. The differences were found during the evaluation of mucosa of both the prepyloric area and body of the stomach (p < 0.001). Moreover, statistically significant differences were found in the inflammation intensity between the examined group and the control group with no symptoms of allergy. In atopic patients infected with Helicobacter pylori, a long-term exposure to food allergens increases the intensity of gastric mucosa inflammation.
...
PMID:Correlation between Helicobacter pylori infection and food allergy in chronic gastritis. 1120 66
The influence of renitec and ednit on duodenal ulcer was studied in 25 patients with cardiac failure. It was found that renitec and ednit lowered both systolic and diastolic pressure, relieved
gastralgia
and
dyspepsia
. Duodenal ulcer healed in 87% of the patients. Contracting and pump function of the right ventricle improved. Plasma levels of angiotensin and aldosteron decreased while prostaglandin E2 increased.
...
PMID:[Renitec and ednit in the treatment of cardiac failure associated with duodenal ulcer]. 1122 Aug 99
1
2
3
Next >>