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Query: UMLS:C0018099 (
gout
)
5,192
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A patient with
gout
and schizophrenia is described who during a schizophrenic paroxysm with paranoid-hypochondriac-hallucinatory syndrome attempted to commit suicide and took 200 tablets milurit (20 g). He developed the picture of acute intoxication with nausea, vomiting, profuse diarrhea, abdominal pain, flushing, temperature, collapse manifestations, hepatomegaly, direct hyperbilirubinemia, elevated transaminase,
leukopenia
, accelerated ESR. After reanimation and infusion therapy, the patient recovered within 4 days and 2 weeks later all blood indices reached the limits of the norm.
...
PMID:[Acute allopurinol (milurit) poisoning]. 402 4
A 69-year-old man was given 8 mg of colchicine intravenously to treat an acute attack of
gout
. A maintenance dose of 2 mg/day of oral colchicine was then used to prevent recurrence. Three months later, the patient developed thrombocytopenia, followed by
leukopenia
and then by anemia at three and four months distance, respectively. The patient had shown no signs of acute toxicity with intravenous colchicine, but liver enzymes were raised after two months of oral treatment. The sequential involvement of the three blood precursor lines, in the order to their physiological half-lives, suggests direct toxicity, rather than idiosyncrasy, due to slow accumulation of the drug within target cells. The prophylactic use of colchicine, especially in the elderly, is questioned.
...
PMID:Marrow aplasia following colchicine treatment for gouty arthritis. 653 22
Gout
in heart transplant recipients is common and poses a significant therapeutic challenge. Concomitant administration of azathioprine and allopurinol therapy carries a high risk of
leukopenia
. Uricosuric agents can cause renal lithiasis and/or acute renal failure in patients with renal failure and/or high urinary levels of uric acid. We report our experience with urate-oxidase in three heart transplant recipients with severe polyarticular and tophaceous
gout
, a history of
leukopenia
under allopurinol and unresponsiveness or contraindications to uricosuric agents. Urate-oxidase was given parenterally in a dosage of 1000 units per day, seven days a month. The injections were done intramuscularly in one patient and intravenously in the other two, who were under anticoagulant therapy. Patients 1 and 2 received 12 and 6 courses, respectively. The third patient had had four courses and was still under treatment at the time of this writing. Shrinking of the tophi and improved mobility of the fingers were seen in all three patients after the second course. No adverse effects were recorded. Our experience suggests that urate-oxidase therapy may decrease the urate burden in patients with severe tophaceous
gout
. Urate-oxidase therapy should be viewed as a phase in the treatment of
gout
, which must be followed by administration of another agent.
...
PMID:Urate-oxidase for the treatment of tophaceous gout in heart transplant recipients. A report of three cases. 765 72
A clinical evaluation of phenylbutazone and Butapyrin(R) (a mixture of phenylbutazone and aminopyrine) was made in 409 patients who had a variety of rheumatic diseases. Preliminary European claims were substantiated.In
gout
a specific favorable effect was brought about by phenylbutazone alone. Effects equivalent to the previously reported favorable response to Butapyrin (Irgapyrin) were observed when its constituent phenylbutazone was used alone. The drug had a suppressive effect in a high percentage of patients with rheumatoid arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, arthritis with psoriasis and mixed arthritis (rheumatoid arthritis plus osteoarthritis). Favorable effect in peritendinitis of the shoulders, osteoporosis of the spine and acute lumbosacral strain also was noted. Toxicity resulted in discontinuance of medication in 10 per cent of patients with each drug. Manifestations of toxicity generally included fluid retention, nausea and rash, but there were several instances of transitory
leukopenia
and anemia. There was one instance of agranulocytosis with Butapyrin but none with phenylbutazone.dagger Aggravation of peptic ulcer occurred in ten patients with hemorrhage in two. Generally the toxicity was of a low order as compared with that of other drugs having an antirheumatic effect.
...
PMID:Phenylbutazone (butazolidin) and butapyrin; a study of clinical effects in arthritis and gout. 1300 82
Objectives:
A previous study suggested that colchicine may cause
leukopenia
and increase the risk of infection, such as pneumonia. Thus, we investigated the potential relationship between colchicine use and risk of developing pneumonia.
Methods:
Data were collected from Taiwan's National Health Insurance Research Database (NHIRD), a nationwide, population-based database. A 13-year retrospective cohort study was conducted, and all investigated subjects were identified by International Classification of Disease, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification, codes between 2000 and 2012. Propensity score matching was applied to adjust for potential confounding variables, and then Cox proportional hazard model was used to evaluate the hazard ratio (HR) of pneumonia in
gout
patients and its associations with colchicine use, colchicine dosage, and days of colchicine use.
Results:
A total of 24,410
gout
patients were enrolled in this study, including 12,205 cases who were treated with colchicine (colchicine group) and 12,205 cases who did not receive colchicine (non-colchicine group). The overall incidence rates of pneumonia in the colchicine group and non-colchicine group were 18.6 and 12.6 per 1,000 person-years, respectively. The colchicine group had a higher risk of pneumonia as compared with the non-colchicine group [adjusted HR, 1.42; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.32 to 1.53; P < 0.05]. High cumulative dose and days of colchicine use notably increased the risk of contracting pneumonia.
Conclusion:
This nationwide population-based cohort study reveals that
gout
patients taking colchicine are at increased risk of developing pneumonia compared with
gout
patients who do not use colchicine. Therefore, it is crucial that
gout
patients being treated with colchicine be given the minimally effective dosage for the shortest possible duration to minimize their risk of pneumonia.
...
PMID:The Association Between Usage of Colchicine and Pneumonia: A Nationwide, Population-Based Cohort Study. 3147 64