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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (
flushing
)
6,387
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In addition to its use as a nutritional supplement, niacin (nicotinic acid or vitamin B3) is medically prescribed to treat hyperlipidemia and hypercholesterolemia. Use of niacin in low doses usually leads to few adverse drug reactions (ADRs); however, at larger doses, niacin can cause skin
flushing
,
itching
, and occasionally more serious effects. The 2005 annual report of the American Association of Poison Control Centers documented 3,109 reports of exposures to niacin. During 2006, the Rocky Mountain Poison and Drug Center (RMPDC) in Denver, Colorado, received multiple calls regarding ADRs after nonmedical use of niacin. A review of call records indicated various uses of niacin, including attempts to alter or mask results of urine drug tests, although no scientific evidence exists that ingestion of niacin can alter a drug test result. To determine the extent of niacin use in attempts to alter drug test results, reports to RMPDC of niacin ADRs were reviewed for the period January--September 2006. The results identified 18 persons who reported nonsuicidal, intentional, nonmedical reasons for using niacin, including eight who specified altering drug test results as their reason for using niacin. Ten other persons, among an additional 18 who offered no reason for niacin use, were categorized as possible users of niacin to try to alter drug test results because of their ages or the amount of niacin ingested. Clinicians, especially those whose patients include teens and young adults, should be aware of the potential use of niacin in attempts to defeat urine drug tests.
...
PMID:Use of niacin in attempts to defeat urine drug testing--five states, January-September 2006. 1744 21
Histamine intolerance results from a disequilibrium of accumulated histamine and the capacity for histamine degradation. Histamine is a biogenic amine that occurs to various degrees in many foods. In healthy persons, dietary histamine can be rapidly detoxified by amine oxidases, whereas persons with low amine oxidase activity are at risk of histamine toxicity. Diamine oxidase (DAO) is the main enzyme for the metabolism of ingested histamine. It has been proposed that DAO, when functioning as a secretory protein, may be responsible for scavenging extracellular histamine after mediator release. Conversely, histamine N-methyltransferase, the other important enzyme inactivating histamine, is a cytosolic protein that can convert histamine only in the intracellular space of cells. An impaired histamine degradation based on reduced DAO activity and the resulting histamine excess may cause numerous symptoms mimicking an allergic reaction. The ingestion of histamine-rich food or of alcohol or drugs that release histamine or block DAO may provoke diarrhea, headache, rhinoconjunctival symptoms, asthma, hypotension, arrhythmia, urticaria,
pruritus
,
flushing
, and other conditions in patients with histamine intolerance. Symptoms can be reduced by a histamine-free diet or be eliminated by antihistamines. However, because of the multifaceted nature of the symptoms, the existence of histamine intolerance has been underestimated, and further studies based on double-blind, placebo-controlled provocations are needed. In patients in whom the abovementioned symptoms are triggered by the corresponding substances and who have a negative diagnosis of allergy or internal disorders, histamine intolerance should be considered as an underlying pathomechanism.
...
PMID:Histamine and histamine intolerance. 1749 Sep 52
Hypersensitivity reactions (HSR) to oxaliplatin in patients with colorectal cancer include facial
flushing
, erythema,
pruritus
, fever, tachycardia, dyspnea, tongue swelling, rash/hives, headache, chills, weakness, vomiting, burning sensations, dizziness, and edema. We report a patient with fever as the sole manifestation of initial HSR, review the literature and discuss the management of HSR. A 57-year-old female with T3N2M0 rectal adenocarcinoma received modified FOLFOX-6. She tolerated the first 8 cycles without any toxicities except grade 1 peripheral neuropathy and nausea. During 9th and 10th infusions, she developed fever to a maximum of 38.3 centigrade with stable hemodynamic status despite medications. During 11th infusion, she developed grade 3 HSR consisting of symptomatic bronchospasm, hypotension, nausea, vomiting, cough, and fever. On examination, she was pale, cyanotic, with a temperature of 38.8 centigrade, BP dropped to 95/43 mm Hg, pulse of 116/min and O(2) saturation of 88%-91%. She was hospitalized for management and recovered in 24 h. Fever alone is not a usual symptom of oxaliplatin HSR. It may be indicative that the patient may develop serious reactions subsequently, as did our patient who developed hypotension with the third challenge. Treatment and prevention consists of slowing the infusion rate, use of steroids and antagonists of Type 1 and 2 histamine receptor antagonists, whereas desensitization could help to provide the small number of patients who experience severe HSR with the ability to further receive an effective therapy for their colorectal cancer.
...
PMID:Fever as the only manifestation of hypersensitivity reactions associated with oxaliplatin in a patient with colorectal cancer Oxaliplatin-induced hypersensitivity reaction. 1787 1
We describe the case of a 75-year-old man first seen in our department 32 years ago for generalized yellowish erythematous papular lesions along with an attack of
pruritus
, tachycardia, and
flushing
. A diagnosis of urticaria pigmentosa was proposed on the basis of these symptoms and the results of skin biopsy. Periodic follow-up in the intervening years included serial laboratory analyses, skin biopsy, radiological studies, bone scintigraphy, and ultrasound of the liver and spleen, with no remarkable findings. The symptoms caused by release of mediators decreased progressively. In one of the most recent visits, bone marrow aspirate and biopsy were performed, revealing multifocal infiltrates of typical CD117+ mast cells. Consequently, the hematology department diagnosed indolent systemic mastocytosis. A number of marked cutaneous changes were observed during the follow-up period: the skin currently appears thickened, indurated, redundant, and grayish, with a pachydermatous appearance. This represents an extremely rare form of cutaneous involvement in mastocytosis and only 1 case has been described in the literature.
...
PMID:[Atypical pachydermatous cutaneous course of mastocytosis]. 1803 29
Although the reported incidence of hypersensitivity reactions (HSR) to antineoplastic agents is considered to be uncommon, it is difficult to evaluate their exact prevalence, mainly because their definition is vast and pathogenic mechanisms are vague. HSR include facial
flushing
, erythema,
pruritus
, fever, tachycardia, dyspnea, tongue swelling, rash/hives, headache, chills, weakness, vomiting, burning sensations, dizziness, and edema. Treatment and prevention consists of slowing the infusion rate, steroids, and type 1 and 2 histamine receptor antagonists. Desensitization could allow the small number of patients who experience severe HSR to receive effective therapy for their cancer. Reintroductions have only been reported as single case studies or small cohorts. Large-scale validation on desensitization strategies is still missing. With regard to oxaliplatin, knowledge of its rare but eminent toxicity is paramount, because this drug is widely used in treating colorectal cancer, the second-highest cause of cancer mortality in the United States.
...
PMID:Hypersensitivity reactions to oxaliplatin and other antineoplastic agents. 1837 76
This study was performed to determine the dose limiting toxicity (DLT), the recommended phase II dose and the pharmacokinetic profile for SR271425, given over 1 h every 3 weeks. The initial starting dose of SR271425 was 17 mg/m(2). Patient selection was based on common phase I criteria as well as additional cardiac criteria. Thirty-eight patients were accrued to 16 dose levels from 17 to 1,320 mg/m(2). Patient characteristics included 24 males and 14 females ages 35-78 with an Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status of 0 (ten patients), 1 (27) and 2 (1). Tumor types were typical for a phase I study. The maximum administered dose was 1,320 mg/m(2) with two DLTs, both QTc grade 3 prolongation. No drug related hematological toxicity was noted. Grade 1 toxicities included rash,
flushing
,
pruritus
, weight loss, diarrhea, hypertension and fatigue. Grade 2 toxicities included yellow discoloration of the skin, nausea and vomiting. QTc prolongation and hyperbilirubinemia were the only grade 3 toxicities noted. No confirmed tumor response was observed; however, two patients had prolonged stable disease. Both C(end) and area under the plasma concentration-time curve increased in a dose related manner. Plasma drug concentrations declined in a biphasic manner with a mean terminal elimination half-life (t (1/2)) of 7.1 h (+/-1.3). There was no change in clearance or volume of distribution over the dose range studied. Due to cardiac toxicity occurring with both the parent compound, SR233377, as well as this analog, this series of agents was abandoned from further clinical development.
...
PMID:Phase I dose-escalation study of the thioxanthone SR271425 administered intravenously once every 3 weeks in patients with advanced malignancies. 1844 72
All chemotherapy agents can cause hypersensitivity reactions, which have limited the used of critical drugs in very sick patients for fear of inducing a more severe reaction and possibly death. The choice of an alternative chemotherapy regimen is often limited by tumor sensitivity and, because of the increasing number of cancer survivors, exposure to multiple courses of the same or similar chemotherapy agents. Increased exposures lead to sensitization and to hypersensitivity reactions in an increasing patient population. The need to offer first line therapy after cancer recurrence has spurred the clinical development of rapid desensitizations, which allow patients to be treated with medications to which they have presented hypersensitivity reactions. Desensitization protocols are available to treat hypersensitivity reactions to most chemotherapy agents including taxenes, platinums, doxorubicin, monoclonal antibodies and others, by gradual re-introduction of small amounts of drug antigens up to full therapeutic doses. Candidate patients include those who present mild to severe type I hypersensitivity, mast cell/IgE dependent, reactions during the chemotherapy infusion or shortly after. Symptoms include
pruritus
,
flushing
, urticaria, angioedema, respiratory and gastrointestinal distress, changes in blood pressure including hypotension, and shock with anaphylaxis. Associated musculoskeletal symptoms and pain can be present in patients reacting to taxenes as in anaphylactoid reactions, in which mast cell/IgE mechanisms cannot be demonstrated. There is now strong evidence that anaphylactoid reactions are amendable to treatment with the same rapid desensitization protocols as for type I hypersensitivity reactions. Initial rapid desensitizations should only be performed in settings with one on one nurse-patient care and where resuscitation personnel and resources are readily available. Temporary tolerization is achieved in a few hours. After the first desensitization, standard protocols are available for safe, repeated desensitizations in outpatient settings with similar conditions, which not only provides flexibility, but allows patients to remain in clinical studies. Breakthrough symptoms are less severe than the initial hypersensitivity reaction in all series reviewed, and deaths have not been reported. The aim of this review is to familiarize the medical community with the type of hypersensitivity reactions amendable to rapid desensitization and to review protocols for chemotherapy desensitization that can be used for most chemotherapy agents. Few studies have measured the cancer response to the chemotherapy agents delivered through rapid desensitizations. One patient population in which 26 patients were desensitized to carboplatin and 16 to paclitaxel had similar rates of remission as for non-desensitized patients. Education of nurses, pharmacists, oncology and allergy specialists will lead to the universal use of rapid desensitization protocols for all cancer patients with hypersensitivity reactions to chemotherapy agents. Basic research is needed to uncover the cellular and molecular mechanisms underlying the temporary tolerization induced by rapid desensitization, so that pharmacological interventions can improve its safety and efficacy.
...
PMID:Rapid desensitization of hypersensitivity reactions to chemotherapy agents. 1869 Sep 34
The aim of this paper was to assess hypersensitivity reactions in 69 patients who received carboplatin (CBDCA) retreatment for recurrent ovarian cancer. Hypersensitivity reactions developed in 15 (21.7%) patients and occurred during the second cycle of retreatment in 13 (86.7%) of them. Reactions consisted of skin rash,
flushing
,
itching
, or abdominal cramping in eight (53.3%) and severe respiratory or cardiovascular events in seven patients (46.7%). One patient had a chest pain, without any other symptoms suggestive of hypersensitivity, followed by cardiac arrest unresponsive to standard resuscitative measures. All the other cases promptly recovered from symptoms. Logistic regression analysis showed that allergy history and CBDCA retreatment interval (interval time between the last cycle of first-line chemotherapy and CBDCA retreatment) were independent predictive variables for the risk of hypersensitivity, whereas patient age, first-line chemotherapy, total CBDCA dose given during first-line treatment, recurrence treated with CBDCA (first versus other), and CBDCA regimen at recurrence had no predictive value. Hypersensitivity reaction rate was higher in patients with CBDCA retreatment interval longer than 23.4 months compared to those with a shorter interval (36.3% versus 8.3%, P = 0.0132). Nine patients were subsequently treated with cisplatin, and two (22.2%) still developed allergic reactions. In conclusion, hypersensitivity reactions to CBDCA retreatment can occur in approximately one fifth of the cases, and a CBDCA retreatment interval longer than 2 years appears to be the strongest predictive variable for the development of allergic reactions.
...
PMID:Analysis of the pattern of hypersensitivity reactions in patients receiving carboplatin retreatment for recurrent ovarian cancer. 1875 35
Systemic mastocytosis (SM) is a rare disease with abnormal proliferation and infiltration of mast cells in the skin, bone marrow, and viscera including the mucosal surfaces of the digestive tract. Gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms occur in 14%-85% of patients with systemic mastocytosis. The GI symptoms may be as frequent as the better known
pruritus
, urticaria pigmentosa, and
flushing
. In fact most recent studies show that the GI symptoms are especially important clinically due to the severity and chronicity of the effects that they produce. GI symptoms may include abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, and bloating. A case of predominantly GI systemic mastocytosis with unique endoscopic images and pathologic confirmation is herein presented, as well as a current review of the GI manifestations of this disease including endoscopic appearances. Issues such as treatment and prognosis will not be discussed for the purposes of this paper.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal manifestations of systemic mastocytosis. 1905 39
Niacin is an effective lipid-modifying therapy whose use has been limited by suboptimal tolerability. The adverse effect of
flushing
is due to prostaglandin D2 (PGD2)-mediated cutaneous vasodilation. Adjunctive treatment with the PGD2 receptor antagonist laropiprant significantly reduces the incidence and severity of niacin-induced
flushing
. The objective of this study was to assess the effect of aspirin pretreatment on
flushing
symptoms with extended-release (ER) niacin/laropiprant in healthy volunteers. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study compared patient-rated
flushing
following pretreatment with aspirin 325 mg versus placebo administered 30 minutes before ER niacin 2 g/laropiprant 40 mg.
Flushing
responses were assessed using participant-reported overall symptom severity score (OSSS), including individual characteristics of redness, warmth, tingling, or
itching
. The overall incidence and severity of
flushing
were comparable for participants receiving aspirin or placebo before ER niacin 2 g/laropiprant 40 mg. The difference in 3-day average OSSS between treatments was 0.2 (P=.180). Profiles of
flushing
severity, frequency, and bothersomeness were comparable for the aspirin/ER niacin/laropiprant and ER niacin/laropiprant regimens. All treatments were safe and well tolerated. Coadministration of aspirin 325 mg daily with ER niacin 2 g/laropiprant 40 mg does not further reduce residual
flushing
symptoms associated with ER niacin 2 g/laropiprant 40 mg alone.
...
PMID:Effects of aspirin when added to the prostaglandin D2 receptor antagonist laropiprant on niacin-induced flushing symptoms. 1924 21
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