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)

Anaphylactoid reactions to vancomycin have been reported consistently since the earliest clinical trials. Signs and symptoms of the reaction, which usually occur during the first dose, can range in severity from mild pruritus and upper body flushing, to dramatic hypotension and cardiovascular arrest. The frequency of the reaction, and its severity, is proportional to the total dose administered and the infusion rate. Recent prospective investigations report that when 1 g of vancomycin is administered over 60 min to normal volunteers and infected patients, between 50-90% of adults will have a reaction, although most are mild and of little clinical consequence. Vancomycin causes a release of histamine into blood, and the severity of the reaction is proportional to the amount of histamine released. Tachyphylaxis rapidly develops in most persons, although decreasing the dose, or increasing the infusion time will also help alleviate the signs and symptoms. Antihistamine H1 blocking agents are also effective in preventing the reaction. Teicoplanin, a new glycopeptide antibiotic, does not appear to cause histamine release or related symptoms, even when administered at a more rapid rate than vancomycin.
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PMID:Anaphylactoid reactions to glycopeptide antibiotics. 171 20

Teicoplanin aglycone-based chromatography columns (Chirobiotic TAG) enable amino acid enantioseparation with aqueous mobile phases, which perfectly accommodates the distinct hydrophilicity of most amino acids. Therefore, this stationary phase constitutes a promising option in particular for preparative-scale separations that require high feed concentrations for economic operation. However, detailed studies revealed a solute-related memory effect when this column is subjected to high loadings of amino acids, conditions that prevail in SMB operation. High loadings yield an activation of the column as indicated by increased retention times when comparing finite injection chromatograms obtained before and after the column had been subjected to a concentrated amino acid feed. This effect can be slowly reversed by flushing the column with solvent devoid of amino acid. Obviously, the activation of the stationary phase needs to be accounted for in the determination of adsorption isotherms that are used for SMB design. In this work we introduce a perturbation method adapted specifically to capture the stationary phase behaviour at SMB-like conditions. The adsorption isotherms obtained from this method indeed allowed for accurate SMB design of a methionine enantioseparation as judged by the very good agreement of experimentally obtained and model-predicted purities. Furthermore, SMB operation over 3 days with constant purities (besides deviations originating from a dip in temperature) was accomplished indicating that the adsorption behaviour in the activated state is indeed time invariant and stable long-term SMB operation with these columns is principally feasible.
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PMID:Simulated moving bed enantioseparation of amino acids employing memory effect-constrained chromatography columns. 2246 4