Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A syndrome of headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, chest pain, palpitations and visual disturbances was associated with chronic occult carbon monoxide exposure in 26 patients in a primary care setting. A causal association was supported by finding a source of carbon monoxide in a patient's home, workplace or vehicle; results of screening tests that ruled out other illnesses; an abnormally high carboxyhemoglobin level in 11 of 14 patients tested, and abatement or resolution of symptoms when the source of carbon monoxide was removed. Exposed household pets provided an important clue to the diagnosis in some cases. Recurrent occult carbon monoxide poisoning may be a frequently overlooked cause of persistent or recurrent headache, fatigue, dizziness, paresthesias, abdominal pain, diarrhea and unusual spells.
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PMID:Occult carbon monoxide poisoning. 382 10

Although the exposure of human subjects to prostacyclin (PGI2) infusion has been broad, no systematic approaches have been made in order to investigate the dose-related side effects in patients with angina pectoris and coronary artery disease (CAD). We studied 25 patients with typical chest pain and overt CAD. All patients underwent a cycloergometer stress testing (25 W increments at 2-min intervals). PGI2 was infused in scalar doses up to 10 ng/kg/min. During the infusion 25 patients (100%) had facial flushing, 7 (28%) moderate headache and one (4%) had nausea. In addition, 4 patients experienced the typical chest pain and had significant (greater than or equal to 0.1 mV) ST segment depression at 8.10 ng/kg/min infusion rates. These patients had lower tolerance to exercise (6.7 +/- 1.7 vs. 8.8 +/- 1.9 min; p less than 0.05) and coronary artery lesions more severe than those observed in patients without drug-induced angina pectoris. Our data therefore indicate that PGI2 at therapeutic doses may induce myocardial ischemia in patients with angina pectoris, low tolerance to exercise and severe CAD. In patients with mild to moderate degree of CAD, PGI2 was found to be well tolerated. These findings suggest that patients with angina pectoris and low tolerance to exercise should be excluded from clinical studies directed at elucidating the effectiveness of PGI2 in cardiovascular disorders.
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PMID:Side effects of prostacyclin in patients with angina pectoris and coronary artery disease. 390 57

A hypertensive urgency should be distinguished from a hypertensive emergency. Although the distinction may not always be obvious, certain guidelines may help the clinician determine which therapeutic approaches are most appropriate for each patient. Hypertensive emergencies include those conditions in which new or progressive severe end-organ damage is present and a delay in appropriate therapy might result in permanent damage, progression of complications, and a poor prognosis. Hypertensive urgencies include those conditions with minimal to no obvious end-organ damage in which blood pressure should be lowered expeditiously. The risk of immediate complications or organ damage is less likely to occur, and thus the immediate prognosis is better, although the ultimate prognosis, if untreated, is poor. There is a marked individual, racial, sexual, and age difference in the ability to tolerate high intraarterial pressure, as evidenced by patients' symptoms and signs of end-organ damage. Patients may have no symptoms of elevated blood pressure until significant intraarterial levels are reached. If symptoms are present, they may include headache, dizziness, blurred vision, shortness of breath (especially with exertion), chest pain, rapid pulse, palpitations, malaise and fatigue, nocturia, or pedal edema. Signs of hypertensive disease vary and depend not only on the level of blood pressure but also include funduscopic changes with arteriolar narrowing, atrioventricular nicking, hemorrhages, exudates or papilledema, central nervous system changes and neurologic abnormalities, cardiac changes with gallop rhythm, cardiomegaly, tachycardia, ectopic ventricular beats, left ventricular hypertrophy or signs of congestive heart failure, pulmonary edema, and signs of renal insufficiency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hypertensive emergencies and urgencies: pathophysiology and clinical aspects. 394 53

Adolescent patients commonly experience symptoms such as headache, chest pain, abdominal pain, or dizziness that are psychophysiologic responses to stress, anxiety, and depression. Because most symptomatic adolescents initially visit medical providers, and not mental health professionals, the clinician is faced with the challenge of providing a comprehensive evaluation that is not merely focused on the symptom. In addition to a careful medical assessment, this evaluation must include a review of psychosocial functioning in the family, school, peer group, and community. Appropriate management may include supportive counseling, instruction in relaxation techniques, anti-depressant medication, and referral for psychotherapy.
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PMID:Evaluation and management of psychosomatic symptoms in adolescence. 394 55

Stress thallium imaging with intravenous dipyridamole permits assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) without the need for exercise. However, intravenous dipyridamole is available in the United States only on an experimental basis. To study the use of oral dipyridamole as a clinically available alternative to intravenous dipyridamole for this purpose, 100 patients underwent thallium imaging with oral dipyridamole. Each patient received 300 mg of pulverized tablets in a 30-ml suspension. Maximal increase in mean heart rate and decrease in mean blood pressure occurred 30 minutes after ingestion. At 45 minutes, 2 mCi of thallium was given intravenously and serial imaging was begun within 7 minutes. The serum dipyridamole level (mean +/- standard deviation) 45 minutes after 300 mg was administered orally (3.7 +/- 2.2 micrograms/ml) was similar to that 5 minutes after 0.56 mg/kg was given intravenously (4.6 +/- 1.3 micrograms/ml). Fifty-five patients had some adverse effects between 15 and 75 minutes after oral ingestion, including nausea, headache, dizziness, chest pain (25 patients) and electrocardiographic changes (14 patients). Intravenous aminophylline was used to resolve these adverse effects in 21 patients. There were no severe arrhythmias, myocardial infarctions or deaths. Of the 43 patients with angiographically documented CAD, 39 had an initial perfusion defect that redistributed on the delayed images. When the results in patients who had undergone catheterization were analyzed by individual segment, the presence of thallium redistribution was associated with normal or hypokinetic contrast left ventriculographic wall motion of that segment, whereas the presence of a persistent defect was associated with akinesia or dyskinesia (Fisher's standardized Z = 9.14).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Usefulness of oral dipyridamole suspension for stress thallium imaging without exercise in the detection of coronary artery disease. 395 32

Following the ingestion of an alleged aphrodisiac known as "yo-yo," a 16-year-old girl experienced an acute dissociative reaction accompanied by weakness, paresthesias, and incoordination. Subsequent symptoms included anxiety, headache, nausea, palpitations, and chest pain. Hypertension, tachycardia, tachypnea, diaphoresis, pallor, tremors, and an erythematous rash were noted on physical examination. Serum epinephrine and norepinephrine levels were found to be elevated. Symptoms resolved spontaneously but lasted approximately 36 hours. The ingested substance was identified as yohimbine. The pharmacology of yohimbine and the treatment of yohimbine poisoning are discussed.
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PMID:Yohimbine: a new street drug. 403 64

Monosodium L-glutamate is the cause of the Chinese restaurant syndrome and can precipitate headaches. In appropriate doses it causes burning sensations, facial pressure, and chest pain. These are pharmacological effects obeying a dose-effect relationship. There is considerable variation in oral threshold does among individuals.
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PMID:Monosodium L-glutamate: its pharmacology and role in the Chinese restaurant syndrome. 576 80

Recent reports have shown that beta-adrenergic blockade may exacerbate variant angina. On theoretical grounds, alpha-adrenergic blockade may be beneficial in these patients. To test this hypothesis, we assessed the efficacy of prazosin, an alpha-adrenergic blocking agent, in six men, mean age 49 years, with variant angina. Prazosin, 14.0 +/- 2.4 mg/day (mean +/- SD) in three equal doses, was compared with placebo in a double-blind, randomized, double-crossover trial lasting 4 1/2 months: 2 weeks of open-label prazosin followed by four 1-month periods of blinded alternating therapy. No other vasoactive medications were administered during the study. Prazosin reduced sitting systolic arterial pressure from 145 +/- 18 to 127 +/- 16 mm Hg (p = 0.02), but exerted no effect on diastolic arterial pressure or heart rate. Prazosin did not change the weekly number of episodes of chest pain (2.5 +/- 2.3 with placebo vs 3.1 +/- 3.0 with prazosin, NS), nitroglycerin tablets used (3.9 +/- 3.7 with placebo vs 4.6 +/- 4.2 with prazosin, NS), or transient ST-segment deviations (by calibrated two-channel Holter monitoring for 24 hours/week throughout the study) (6.5 +/- 10.1 with placebo vs 11.8 +/- 17.4 with prazosin, NS). During prazosin therapy, three patients had orthostatic dizziness and one patient had headache. Thus, in a long-term, randomized, double-blind trial, prazosin exerted no obvious beneficial effect in patients with variant angina.
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PMID:Alpha-adrenergic blockade for variant angina: a long-term, double-blind, randomized trial. 613 37

A retrospective study of 55 patients with panic disorder referred for psychiatric consultation by primary care physicians is presented. Eighty-nine percent of the patients initially presented with one or two somatic complaints, and misdiagnosis often continued for months or years. The three most common presentations were cardiac symptoms (chest pain, tachycardia, irregular heart beat), gastrointestinal symptoms (especially epigastric distress), and neurologic symptoms (headache, dizziness/vertigo, syncope, or paresthesias). Eighty-one percent of patients had a presenting pain complaint. Hypertension and peptic ulcer were the most common medical diagnoses, and depression and alcoholism the most frequently associated psychiatric diagnoses.
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PMID:Panic disorder and somatization. Review of 55 cases. 637 87

Nine patients with coronary heart disease, 8 of whom were taking adrenergic beta-blockers, were tested by dynamic (bicycle) and isometric (sitting handgrip) exercise before and 2 and 6 h after application of nitroglycerin 30 mg in an ointment, or a matching placebo ointment, over 225 cm2 surface on the chest, in a double-blind, cross-over, single dose study. Exercise time until stopping from chest pain was significantly increased (by about 20%) by active ointment, and electrocardiographic ST-depression and chest pain intensity were significantly less pronounced during exercise both 2 and 6 h after application. During seated rest, active ointment also produced a significantly lower systolic blood pressure and a significantly higher heart rate at both 2 and 6 h, whereas during handgrip, significant differences from placebo were seen only at 2 h. All patients experienced headache for at least the 6 h of the study. At a given heart rate, ST-depression was less pronounced with active ointment than with placebo.
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PMID:Effect of nitroglycerin ointment (Nitrong) on exercise tolerance and several circulatory parameters in patients with angina pectoris. 641 79


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