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)

The Oriental flushing reaction is an adverse response to alcohol that appears to be genetically determined. In this study, the Oriental flushing reaction that was produced with ingestion of small amounts of alcohol was antagonized by antihistamine administration. A group of 17 subjects was tested. Each subject received placebo, diphenhydramine 50 mg (H-1 receptor antagonist), and cimetidine 300 mg (H-2 receptor antagonist) singularly and in combination. Alcohol was then administered orally. Most subjects given placebo experienced the typical flushing reaction that included a cutaneous flush, increase in skin temperature, decrease in blood pressure, increase in pulse rate and subjective symptoms such as dizziness, sleepiness, anxiety, headache, generalized weakness, and nausea. The flush, temperature and systolic hypotension were significantly blocked by the combined antihistamine administration. Cimetidine given alone blocked the flush, temperature increase, and systolic hypotension significantly more than diphenhydramine but less than the combined antihistamines. Diphenhydramine was similar to placebo in its effect on the flushing reaction. The role of histamine in the expression of tolerance to alcohol is not known. Antihistamine antagonism of the adverse flushing reaction suggests that histamine receptors may participate in the intolerance to ethanol in Orientals. Histamine may be an important protective factor in the low prevalence of alcoholism in Orientals.
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PMID:Histamine receptor antagonism of intolerance to alcohol in the Oriental population. 368 Dec 77

Plasma and urine histamine levels were measured during sequential infusions of histamine (0.05, 0.1, 0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 microgram/kg/min histamine base for 30 min each) to determine the plasma level required to elicit flushing, headaches, tachycardia, and diastolic hypotension. Each study was performed with subjects on no medications or after pretreatment with hydroxyzine and/or cimetidine in order to confirm the receptor subtype involved in each of the responses. Resting plasma histamine levels were 0.62 +/- 0.12 ng/ml, and levels rose progressively indirect proportion to the concentration of infused histamine. Plasma levels of histamine required to elicit symptoms were as follows: 1.61 +/- 0.30 ng/ml = 30% increase in heart rate, 2.39 +/- 0.52 ng/ml = significant flush and headache, and 2.45 +/- 0.13 ng/ml = 30% increase in pulse pressure. Cimetidine pretreatment failed to influence the histamine level required to elicit symptoms, hydroxyzine pretreatment significantly raised the level required to increase heart rat by 30%, and the combination of antihistamines significantly raised the threshold for histamine to elicit all the response. Urine histamine was increased in direct proportion to the histamine infusions, and because of stability, accessibility, and the capacity for retrospective diagnosis, urine is the suggested fluid to employ to measure histamine release in humans.
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PMID:Effects of infused histamine: correlation of plasma histamine levels and symptoms. 612 Sep 67

A woman had episodic attacks of flushing associated with severe skin, bone, and abdominal pain, accompanied by mood alterations and anxiety, and followed by an organic psychosis. These symptoms and signs could be induced by small doses of clonidine, L-5-hydroxytryptophan, pentagastrin, insulin, epinephrine, compound 48/80, methacholine, morphine, histamine, or d-tubocurarine. Skin testing showed abnormally sensitive mast cells and an exaggerated axon flare. Cimetidine initially prevented the attacks but became less effective after 18 months. Thyrotropin-releasing hormone stopped the skin pain whereas neurotensin reproduced the burning sensation in the skin without inducing the attack. Both the flush and the organic psychosis were reversed entirely by naloxone or naltrexone, and the hallucinosis could be reversed by vasodilators.
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PMID:A case of episodic flushing and organic psychosis: reversal by opiate antagonists. 618 3