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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with the midgut carcinoid syndrome with severe diarrhoea and proven hypersecretion of serotonin (5-HT) was treated with low doses of verapamil perorally. During treatment the patient was completely relieved of diarrhoea but discrete facial
flushing
persisted during treatment. When treatment was cessated, diarrhoeas recurred. This patient underwent pentagastrin (PG) provocation repeatedly; during untreated conditions injection of PG released 5-HT, detectable in peripheral venous blood. Such release was abolished during verapamil treatment, but recurred after withdrawal of the drug. Surgical biopsies from this tumour were studied in two experimental models: cell suspensions and heterotransplants grown in the anterior eye-chamber of immunosuppressed rats. Release of 5-HT from the cell suspensions was elicited in a dose-dependent manner after stimulation with isoprenaline (IP) suggesting activation of beta-adrenoceptors on the tumour cells. Such release was reduced after pretreatment with verapamil indicating a calcium dependent mechanism. Intraocular tumour transplants also responded with release of 5-HT into the chamber fluid after conjunctival application of IP. However, pretreatment of the rats with verapamil significantly reduced the IP-stimulated release of 5-HT.
Br J
Cancer
1986 Aug
PMID:Verapamil and diarrhoea in the carcinoid syndrome--clinical and experimental observations on serotonin release. 374 62
In a series of 60 consecutive patients in whom Hickman catheters were placed for treatment of
malignancy
, four properly positioned catheter tips migrated secondarily from the superior vena cava to the ipsilateral jugular vein 2, 4, 21, and 25 days after placement. Three of the four patients had begun to have catheter dysfunction when the displacement was diagnosed. No satisfactory explanation for this rarely reported complication was evident in three of the cases. Maneuvers such as coughing, Valsalva's maneuver, and forceful heparin
flushing
produced no motion in three normally directed catheter tips in other patients observed under fluoroscopy. The phenomenon may be more common than previously reported. Evaluation of any new Hickman catheter dysfunction should include a chest x-ray film to ascertain the position of the catheter.
...
PMID:Hickman catheter tip displacement. 390 10
Intravenous metoclopramide and IM prochlorperazine and diazepam were compared in the management of vomiting occurring during treatment with cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum (cis-platinum). A total of 104 cycles in 30 patients were evaluated. Twenty-two patients took part in a cross-over study in which emetic profiles for each patient managed with each anti-emetic schedule were compared. In all, 44 cycles of treatment in 22 patients were evaluated as part of a cross-over study. No significant difference in emetic control was observed between the two anti-emetic regimens. The side-effects observed using IV metoclopramide included extrapyramidal phenomena (19%) and
flushing
attacks (16%).
Cancer
Chemother Pharmacol 1985
PMID:High-dose intravenous metoclopramide and intermittent intramuscular prochlorperazine and diazepam in the management of emesis induced by cis-dichlorodiammineplatinum. 403 34
Because relatively undiluted concentrations of drugs are maintained for prolonged periods in the Y-side arm of rapidly flowing iv infusions, we visually determined compatibilities of ten commonly used
cancer
chemotherapy drugs and four adjunctive drugs including droperidol, metoclopramide, furosemide, and heparin. Droperidol was found to be incompatible with furosemide, methotrexate, leucovorin, heparin, and 5-FU. Furosemide was incompatible with metoclopramide, doxorubicin, vincristine, and vinblastine in addition to droperidol. Doxorubicin was incompatible with heparin. If these drugs were administered sequentially into the Y-side arm of an iv infusion, precipitation would be expected with drug inactivation and possible drug embolization to the pulmonary circulation.
Flushing
the Y-side arm with a compatible solution after drug administration will prevent this problem.
Cancer
Treat Rep 1985 Nov
PMID:Drug precipitation within i.v. tubing: a potential hazard of chemotherapy administration. 409 96
The patient was a 60-year-old Japanese male. He complained of epigastralgia and right chest pain of 4 month's duration, and general malaise, nausea and vomiting of 2 month's duration. Physical examination revealed on the right third rib a tender mass with a diameter of 2 cm and hepatomegaly with a multi-nodular surface and red palms. There were no signs of carcinoid syndrome, such as cutaneous
flushing
. Laboratory examinations disclosed certain biochemical alterations; alkaline phosphatase 810 IU/l, gamma-glutamyl transpeptidase (gamma-GTP) 2090 IU/l, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA) 23.5 ng/ml and alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) 6,800 ng/ml. Both HBs-Ag and HBs-Ab were negative. The patient died in a uremic state, with rapid increases of jaundice and ascites. Autopsy revealed gastric carcinoid with extensive metastases to the liver and the bone marrow. Tumor cells showed argyrophilia but not argentaffinity. Immunofluorescence specific for AFP was positive in the hepatocytes, particularly those adjacent to the metastatic tumor cells but not in the tumor cells, either primary or secondary. 79 cases reported in Japan of serum AFP-positive
malignant tumor
other than hepatocellular carcinoma and certain other
malignancies
of germ cell origin are reviewed and discussed.
...
PMID:Serum alpha-fetoprotein-positive gastric carcinoid with liver metastasis. 616 67
Thirty patients with symptoms of the carcinoid syndrome and other symptoms not controlled by pharmacological agents were analysed with respect to the value of various treatment measures used. Tumour devascularization was carried out in 11 patients, either by surgical ligation of the main hepatic artery (6) or by percutaneous arterial embolization (5). The latter was shown to be the safer technique, both with respect to initial morbidity/mortality and other side effects. Control of
flushing
and diarrhoea was achieved in 80% and the technique was also repeated on one occasion with success when symptoms recurred. The use of cytotoxic drugs alone, including 5-fluorouracil, cyclophosphamide and Adriamycin produced symptomatic relief in only 4 of the 22 patients treated. They should only be considered if devascularization by arterial embolization proves impossible or cannot be repeated when symptoms recur.
Br J
Cancer
1982 Sep
PMID:Use of arterial devascularization and cytotoxic drugs in 30 patients with the carcinoid syndrome. 618 1
The intestinal carcinoid tumors of 26 patients were stained for the presence of serotonin, gastrin, somatostatin, motilin, secretin, glucagon, pancreatic polypeptide, ACTH, and neurotensin. Argentaffin and argyrophil stains were also performed in all cases. Thirty-five separate tumors (counting metastases and multiple primaries) from the 26 patients were studied. Serotonin was present in 30 of the 35 tumors. Nineteen tumors contained serotonin only. Fourteen tumors contained multiple neuroendocrine products. One tumor contained gastrin only. One tumor did not stain immunohistochemically, but was argyrophilic. Metastatic deposits were studied in nine patients. Some metastases produced the identical neuroendocrine products as the primary tumor, whereas others produced either additional or fewer hormones than the primary tumor. Moreover, different metastases from the same primary tumor were observed to produce different hormones. Argyrophilic cells were present in all cases and were much more numerous than cells staining by immunohistochemistry. Argyrophilic cells probably contain monoamines and polypeptide hormones in addition to those studied in this series. The argyrophil stain was the best general stain in this study for the demonstration of neuroendocrine cells. Argentaffin staining was negative in ten cases that were serotonin positive and two argentaffin positive cases were serotonin negative. The carcinoid syndrome, as clinically defined by the presence of
flushing
and diarrhea, was noted in five patients, all of whom had serotonin-containing small bowel carcinoids. Endocrine-related symptoms were not clinically appreciated in the remaining patients.
Cancer
1983 May 15
PMID:The neuroendocrine products of intestinal carcinoids. An immunoperoxidase study of 35 carcinoid tumors stained for serotonin and eight polypeptide hormones. 618 28
A tumor substrain secreting a large amount of serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT); CAS: 50-67-9; 3-(2-amino-ethyl)indol-5-ol] and a minute amount of histamine (CAS: 51-45-6) has been isolated from the previously established strain of transplantable gastric carcinoid of Mastomys (Praomys) natalensis secreting both histamine and 5-HT. Mastomys bearing a large growing transplant and excreting a large amount of 5-hydroxy-indoleacetic acid [(5-HIAA) CAS: 54-16-0] were associated often with reddening of the nose, lower lip, auricles, hands, and feet. Soon after the animals were anesthetized by ether or other volatile anesthetics, the tinges of red of the above-mentioned exposed parts abruptly turned bright red and rapidly spread over the neck, upper chest, and epigastric area. The reddening was transient, lasting 1.5-5 minutes, thereby fulfilling the criteria of
flushing
. The severity of ether-provoked
flushing
in tumor-bearing Mastomys paralleled the urinary excretion levels of 5-HIAA. The ether-provoked
flushing
was prevented completely by sc injection of either ketanserin (150 micrograms) or somatostatin (20 micrograms). The same ether-provoked
flushing
as found in tumor-bearing Mastomys could be reproduced in normal ones by constant infusion of 20 mg 5-HT/kg/24 hours (i.e., doses comparable to those released from a transplanted tumor) through an osmotic minipump implanted subcutaneously.
J Natl
Cancer
Inst 1984 Jun
PMID:Novel flushing provoked by volatile anesthetics in Mastomys natalensis bearing a transplantable substrain of gastric carcinoid that predominantly secretes serotonin. 620 24
A gastric tumor was found in a 64-year-old woman who later developed
flushing
, tachycardia, headache, and lacrymation. The plasma pancreatic polypeptide (PP) level was 700 times normal values, and the majority of the tumor cells were immunoreactive to PP antiserum. Symptoms were alleviated, and PP levels fell after embolization of the hepatic artery for liver metastases. This is the first reported case of gastric PP-producing endocrine tumor.
Cancer
1984 Sep 15
PMID:A pancreatic-polypeptide-producing tumor of the stomach. 646 36
A totally implantable system for providing access to the peritoneal cavity was evaluated. Fifty-six Port-A-Cath (Pharmacia Nu Tech, Piscataway, NJ) peritoneal access systems were implanted in 54
cancer
patients receiving intraperitoneal chemotherapy. The catheters are accessed by transcutaneous placement of a Huber point needle through a silicone septum at the top of the portal. A total of 32 patient years of experience are reported. The Port-A-Caths have been in place for a median of 22 weeks (range, one to 85). A total of 401 entries have been made for paracentesis, chemotherapy administration, antibiotic administration, peritoneal lavage for cytology, and catheter
flushing
. There have been six episodes of peritonitis (five Staphylococcus epidermidis, one S aureus) in three patients. There have been no mechanical failures of the Port-A-Caths. Loss of bidirectional flow through the catheter due to fibrin deposition about the catheter has been the major cause of catheter failure. Patient acceptance of the Port-A-Cath has been excellent.
...
PMID:Totally implantable system for peritoneal access. 649 5
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