Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016382 (flushing)
6,387 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An apparent allergic reaction has been noted in children undergoing open urological surgery. This condition is characterized by precipitous hypotension, tachycardia and upper body flushing, and it often causes termination of the procedure. Latex allergy has been identified as the possible inciting event. Contact of latex rubber gloves with intra-abdominal structures (handling bowel) appears to be the most dramatic trigger mechanism for this reaction. We report on 10 patients with latex allergy, 6 of whom have myelomeningocele, who have undergone reconstructive surgery. Severe anaphylactic shock developed intraoperatively in 5 patients and during a barium enema performed with a latex catheter in 1 patient. These 6 patients had previous allergic reactions to latex material, which was not detected preoperatively. In the remaining 4 patients latex allergy was diagnosed preoperatively. A total of 6 patients agreed to a skin prick test to liquid latex. Three patients reacted with a wheal size greater than or equal to a histamine control at a dilution of 1:1,000 and 3 patients at 1:100. In contrast, none of the 5 normal controls reacted to any of the concentrations including full strength latex. A history of exposure to latex products (balloons, surgical gloves, catheters, condoms and so forth) with allergic reactions should heighten surgeon awareness of a potentially severe intraoperative reaction. Furthermore, a skin prick test may be used to screen high risk patients such as those with myelomeningocele. A protocol involving preoperative corticosteroid and antihistamine therapy is recommended.
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PMID:Intraoperative cardiovascular collapse secondary to latex allergy. 186 2

To understand better the mechanism of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor-associated angioedema, we studied the effects of ACE-inhibitor treatment on wheal-and-flare responses to histamine, codeine, and bradykinin in 10 normal subjects. No change in the size of wheal-and-flare reactions to histamine occurred, but the size of wheal reactions to codeine and bradykinin increased in all study subjects after ingesting the ACE inhibitor, captopril. Five of 10 study subjects developed flushing reactions after ACE-inhibitor treatment. We conclude that inhibition of bradykinin metabolism by ACE inhibitors is the probable cause of ACE inhibitor-related angioedema and that substance P is not the predominant mediator in this process.
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PMID:Studies of the mechanism of angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor-associated angioedema: the effect of an ACE inhibitor on cutaneous responses to bradykinin, codeine, and histamine. 218 92

Reports in the literature about cinnamon oil toxicity are limited to allergic reactions and local irritant effects from dermatologic exposure. Cinnamon oil is easily obtained from pharmacies in 5-10 ml amounts for use as a flavoring agent and in craft items. Within a 5-mo period the Pittsburgh Poison Center (PPC) documented 32 cases of cinnamon oil abuse; all cases involved males aged 11-16 y and were reported to the PPC by school nurses. Sucking on toothpicks or fingers which had been dipped in cinnamon oil was the primary method of abuse. A rush or sensation of warmth, facial flushing, and oral burning were the experiences reported by the users. Some children complained of nausea or abdominal pain but no systemic effects were reported. Eight patients with dermal exposure had irritation ranging from erythema to welts, which resolved after thorough soap and water decontamination. Two ocular exposures resulted in mild irritation and were successfully treated with irrigation or dilution. The recent popularity of cinnamon oil abuse appears to be related to the ease with which it can be carried, engendering little fear of discovery or chastisement. Despite the relatively low toxicity of cinnamon oil, medical professionals should be aware of its potential for misuse.
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PMID:Cinnamon oil abuse by adolescents. 232 68

Sixty patients scheduled for elective surgery underwent intradermal testing with 0.1 ml of the following solutions diluted in 0.9% saline: vecuronium and tubocurarine (1 in 1,000), atracurium (1 in 1,000 and 1 in 10,000), thiopentone (1 in 100) and also a 0.9% saline control. Thirty minutes later, an area of erythema of greater than 1.5 cm, or a wheal exceeding 1.0 cm in diameter, was recorded as a positive reaction. The patients then randomly received equipotent doses of atracurium, vecuronium or tubocurarine during a standardized anaesthetic induction. Any cutaneous reaction and the percentage fall in systolic pressure three minutes after administration of the relaxant were recorded. In 51 patients plasma IgE levels were measured. The incidence of positive cutaneous reactions to intradermal and intravenous relaxants was significantly different with each agent (p less than 0.01). The percentage fall in systolic pressure after tubocurarine was significantly different relative to the other two agents (p less than 0.01). This was regarded as reflecting potency in releasing histamine and placed the relaxants in the same order: tubocurarine, atracurium and vecuronium. The response to intradermal administration was no guide to the subsequent response after intravenous administration of the three relaxants. IgE levels below 15 IU X ml-1 occurred significantly more often in females and were associated with a significantly higher incidence of cutaneous reactions after intradermal atracurium (1 in 1,000 and 1 in 10,000) (p less than 0.05 and 0.001 respectively) and tubocurarine (1 in 1,000). With these two agents, generalized flushing after intravenous administration was also more common in this group, relative to the normal/high IgE group.
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PMID:Histaminoid responses to atracurium, vecuronium and tubocurarine. 240 13

We have recently shown that the novel neuropeptide calcitonin gene-related peptide, CGRP, is a potent vasodilator. In this paper we report a detailed study of the effects of CGRP in human skin. CGRP induces a clearly defined, long-lasting erythema. We have measured the effect of CGRP on blood flow in human skin using a laser Doppler technique and have demonstrated increased local blood flow that persists for a number of hours. We compared the response of CGRP with other known vasodilators [histamine, prostaglandin (PG) E2, PGI2, substance P, and vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP)] in the skin, and in all subjects the erythema induced by CGRP was more persistent than that induced by the other mediators tested. Except at high doses the local vasodilatation induced by CGRP was not associated with a wheal and flare as seen with histamine, substance P, and VIP. CGRP is an extremely potent vasodilator and if released into the circulation, or locally from peripheral nerve endings, it could have a role in the regulation of blood flow in both physiologic and pathologic conditions; CGRP may be the endogenous mediator of the flare in the triple response. A deficiency in CGRP secretion or action could be an important component of peripheral vascular disease. Some flushing reactions (e.g., those associated with medullary thyroid carcinoma) may result from circulating CGRP.
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PMID:Potent vasodilator activity of calcitonin gene-related peptide in human skin. 242 85

1. To test the hypothesis that angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors potentiate the tissue effects of bradykinin, the thickness of weals produced by intradermal injections of bradykinin was measured in 17 hypertensive subjects whose antihypertensive regimen included an ACE inhibitor, and in 12 whose treatment did not. 2. Weal thickness increased linearly with the logarithm of the bradykinin dose in both groups (P less than 0.0001). 3. The patients receiving ACE inhibitors showed a mean response of 1.18 +/- 0.08 mm (mean +/- s.e. mean), compared with a mean response of 0.75 +/- 0.08 mm for patients not receiving an ACE inhibitor (P = 0.002). Mean weal response (1.08 +/- 0.9 mm) was not significantly different in patients taking captopril (n = 11) compared with that (1.29 +/- 0.12 mm) in patients taking enalapril (n = 9). 4. Facial flushing during the experiment occurred in six patients taking ACE inhibitors but none who were not. 5. Dermal responses to bradykinin are enhanced in patients taking ACE inhibitors as routine antihypertensive therapy. This study supports the hypothesis that bradykinin may be responsible for some of the adverse effects of these drugs.
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PMID:The effects of intradermal bradykinin are potentiated by angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors in hypertensive patients. 254 53

During her 26th week of pregnancy a 20-year-old woman developed generalized pruritus, urticaria, flushing, tinnitus, and tachycardia during plasmapheresis with 5% human serum albumin (HSA) as adjunctive treatment for anti-Kell isoimmunization. The reaction was controlled with intravenous diphenhydramine. Despite pretreatment with diphenhydramine and betamethasone a subsequent attempt to perform plasmapheresis with infusion of 5% HSA resulted in a more severe reaction which progressed to respiratory distress. Intradermal skin testing with 5% HSA produced a 9 x 11-mm wheal and 17 x 21-mm erythema at 15 minutes. An enzyme-linked immunoassay was positive for IgE antibody to 5% HSA before and after dialysis for removal of Na caprylate. These results are consistent with an IgE-mediated basis for this patient's reaction to HSA.
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PMID:Anaphylaxis to human serum albumin. 230 85

We studied the effect of ketotifen, an oral antiallergic and antihistaminic drug, on the airway and cutaneous responses to platelet-activating factor (PAF) in a double-blind, randomized, and crossover study in six normal subjects. Ketotifen (three doses of 2 mg taken during a 14-hour period before PAF) did not alter PAF-induced bronchoconstriction and did not prevent the accompanying flushing and coughing. The transient neutropenia (74.5 +/- 4.8% fall; p less than 0.001) and rebound neutrophilia (104 +/- 55% rise) induced by PAF were not affected by ketotifen. On the day placebo was received, airway responsiveness to methacholine increased after PAF exposure with the concentration needed to cause a 40% fall in baseline partial expiratory flow rate (PC40), decreasing from 69.2 mg/ml (geometric standard error of the mean, 2.69) to 23.3 mg/ml (2.34) on day 3 (p less than 0.001). Ketotifen had no effect, because on the day ketotifen was administered, mean PC40 also decreased from 52.7 mg/ml (2.5) to 21.5 mg/ml (2.14) (p less than 0.01). In the skin, ketotifen reduced the flare area (from 8.05 +/- 3.60 to 1.14 +/- 0.29 cm2; p less than 0.05) and the wheal volume (from 0.068 +/- 0.010 to 0.045 +/- 0.008 cc; p = 0.02) induced by intradermal PAF (200 ng). Cutaneous responses to histamine (1 microgram) were significantly inhibited. Thus, the bronchoconstriction and bronchial hyperresponsiveness induced by PAF are not inhibited by ketotifen. Ketotifen inhibits PAF-induced wheal and flare in the skin, which is probably histamine dependent. The airway effects of PAF are unlikely to be mediated by histamine release.
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PMID:Ketotifen inhibits the cutaneous but not the airway responses to platelet-activating factor in man. 328 83

A woman complained of severe itching and flushing after sexual intercourse or other physical contact with her husband. She developed a weal and flare on intradermal testing with her husband's semen and sweat, pooled donor semen and the sweat from her 2 sons. This is a report of allergy to human semen and the 1st reported case of allergy to human sweat.
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PMID:Woman allergic to husband's sweat and semen. 370 44

Morphine and tubocurarine may release histamine by direct mast cell degranulation which may result in systemic effects such as cutaneous flushing, local wheal and flare formation and hypotension. This randomised, double-blind study examined whether preoperative combined oral terfenadine (60 mg) and ranitidine (150 mg) attenuates the reduction in blood pressure and cutaneous flushing after the administration of tubocurarine and morphine in 60 patients undergoing elective gynaecological surgery. In addition, investigation was made of whether tubocurarine and morphine cause a significant decrease in gastric pH in comparison to the nonhistamine-releasing agents fentanyl and vecuronium. Patients were randomly assigned to one of three groups receiving either pre-operative terfenadine and ranitidine and intra-operative tubocurarine and morphine (group A); pre-operative placebo and intra-operative tubocurarine and morphine (group B); pre-operative placebo and intra-operative fentanyl and vecuronium (group C). Compared to group B, group A had less hypotension and tachycardia but no significant decrease in cutaneous flushing immediately following morphine and tubocurarine (p > 0.05). There were no significant differences in haemodynamic changes between the groups A and C. In those patients not pretreated with terfenadine and ranitidine (groups B and C), gastric pH decreased between 5 and 10 min following bolus administration of morphine and tubocurarine (group B), whereas patients receiving fentanyl and vecuronium (group C) had an increase in gastric pH. This suggests that histamine release following administration of morphine and tubocurarine is sufficient to increase gastric acidity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The influence of the H1 and H2 receptor antagonists, terfenadine and ranitidine on the hypotensive and gastric pH effects of the histamine releasing drugs, morphine and tubocurarine. 821 91


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