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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Scombroid fish poisoning, one of the most common adverse reactions to fish, is also probably one of the most common causes of a flushing syndrome. The reaction usually involves fishes of the Scombridae family but, in Hawaii, the reaction is most often due to mahimahi (Coryphaena hippurus). Onset of the reaction is usually abrupt and commonly associated with a prominent flush resembling a sunburn.
Headache
, tachye to a toxin with histamine-like properties, which is formed because improper refrigeration enables endogenous bacteria to decarboxylate histidine normally present in dark-meat fishes. Symptoms are usually promptly relieved by parenteral antihistamine therapy.
Arch
Dermatol
1979 Aug
PMID:Flushing syndrome due to mahimahi (scombroid fish) poisoning. 57 60
In order to demonstrate the variability of the muco-cutaneous and neurovegetative signs and symptoms of Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome (MRS), we report the cases of five out of 80 patients suffering from this complex oro-facial syndrome. In the majority of our patients the major symptoms, and in particular recurrent labial or intraoral swellings and/or facial palsy, did not occur simultaneously, which delayed the definite diagnosis of either complete or incomplete type of MRS. However, more than 80 p. 100 of our patients complained of various relapsing cranio-facial neurovegetative troubles that constitute the so-called minor symptoms of MRS, whereas a history or sequelae of facial palsy were found in only 35 p. 100 of our patients followed up for years or decades. In patients with solitary facial palsy or oro-facial oedemas as the initial symptom of putative MRS, the uncovering of concomitant minor symptoms proves to be helpful for substantiating the recognition of incomplete MRS. Thus, in questionable cases of MRS attention should be paid to seemingly incidental disturbances of the cranio-facial neurovegetative system (e. g., relapsing disorders of lacrimation, sweating, migraine-like
headache
) forming minor but characteristic hints to incomplete or unusual cases of MRS.
Ann
Dermatol
Venereol 1992
PMID:[Chronicity and diagnostic doubts of Melkersson-Rosenthal syndrome. Analysis of developing ways in 5 cases]. 128 87
A 71-year-old man was admitted to the Wake Forest University/Baptist Hospital Medical Center on February 1, 1989, with pharyngitis and a cutaneous eruption that began that day. The past history was significant for a diagnosis of chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) made in 1984, and for longstanding hypertension, severe coronary artery disease, and prostatic hypertrophy. The patient had required no therapy for his CLL until August, 1988, when he developed hemolytic anemia and was treated with oral chlorambucil, 4 mg/day, and a tapering course of prednisone. By December, 1988, the prednisone therapy had been discontinued, but the patient required hospital admission for pneumococcal pneumonia, which responded well to intravenous antibiotic therapy. One day prior to the current admission the patient complained of persistent fevers, sore throat, productive cough, and
headache
. He noted a new cutaneous eruption on the day of admission in February, 1989. The past history was positive for occasional herpes stomatitis. The patient did not know if he had previously been infected with varicella. Skin examination revealed multiple (greater than 20), single, and grouped vesicles in a generalized distribution involving the bilateral trunk, head, neck, arms, and legs. The heaviest involvement was on the right posterior auricular area and on the neck. A Tzanck preparation obtained from an early lesion was positive for multinucleated giant cells. Viral culture was negative at 24 hours and at 1 week. A skin biopsy of an early vesicular lesion was performed and revealed intraepidermal vesicles with acantholysis and giant cells.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Int J
Dermatol
1992 Jan
PMID:Granuloma annulare and disseminated herpes zoster. 145 73
From September 1982 to June 1987, all members (N = 513) of the Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Seattle, Wash, who were prescribed isotretinoin for acne were observed throughout the first 4- to 5-month course of therapy for effectiveness and adverse effects. The highest rates of use were among male subjects aged 15 to 24 years. Excluding 47 subjects whose prescriptions were stopped because of noncompliance or who left the care of Group Health Cooperative physicians, 39 (8.4%) of the remaining 466 discontinued taking the drug because of the following adverse effects: mucous/skin/musculoskeletal effects (17); elevated triglyceride levels (eight);
headaches
(five); increased liver enzyme levels (three); amenorrhea (two); and other (four). One subject, excluded from the 466 because of noncompliance, became pregnant while using medication from a previous prescription and had a therapeutic abortion; she was not under the care of a physician at the time of pregnancy. Most subjects (97%) developed a mucocutaneous symptom, and 42% developed musculoskeletal symptoms. Moderate elevations in liver enzyme levels developed in six (1.8%) of 341 subjects with normal baseline values. Of 389 subjects with normal baseline triglyceride values (less than 2.25 mmol/L), nine (2.3%) developed moderate elevations (4.5 to 9.0 mmol/L), and one (0.3%) developed a severe elevation (greater than or equal to 9.0 mmol/L). Of 24 subjects with elevated baseline triglyceride levels, three (12.5%) developed moderate elevations. Of an additional 53 subjects whose baseline serum triglyceride levels were not determined, two developed elevations during therapy, one up to 13.4 mmol/L. Subjects who were overweight or had elevated baseline serum triglyceride values had an increased risk of developing elevations in triglyceride levels during therapy (odds ratio, 6.0; 95% confidence interval, 1.6 to 22.0; and odds ratio, 4.35; 95% confidence interval, 0.9 to 20.2, respectively). Acne was improved for at least 94.0% of subjects.
Arch
Dermatol
1991 Mar
PMID:An observational study of isotretinoin recipients treated for acne in a health maintenance organization. 182 96
A comparison of the triphasic Triphasil and the combined oral contraceptive Diane 50 for treatment of acne for 6 cycles showed significant improvement in both groups. Triphasil (Wyeth-Ayerst) contains 50 mcg levonorgestrel and 30 mcg ethinyl estradiol, 75 mcg levonorgestrel and 40 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 5 days and 125 mcg levonorgestrel and 30 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 10 days. Diane 50 (Schering Ag) contains 2 mg cyproterone acetate and 50 mcg ethinyl estradiol for 21 days per cycle. 10 women in each group had physical, pelvic, ophthalmologic and neurologic exams, hematologic and biochemical screens, assays of free testosterone, sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG), androstenedione, dehydroepiandrosterone SO4 (DHEAS), progesterone, and computations of acne and hirsutism scores. Subjects had used tetracyclines, isotretinoin, erythromycin, topical clindamycin and benzoyl peroxide previously, but were withdrawn from medication in the cycle before the intervention. The mean acne scores, derived from grading and counting lesions and comedones, fell from 63.3 to 6 in the Diane 50 and from 64.2 to 4.5 in the Triphasil group. Subjective results were excellent for 6, good for 2 and unsatisfactory for 2 in the Diane 50 group, and excellent for 8 and good for 2 in the Triphasil group. In both groups mean free testosterone, androgen index, androstenedione and DHEAS, and an increase in SHBG were documented. 5 Triphasil and 5 Diane 50 subjects had increased cholesterol levels during the trial, the only abnormality detected. Side effects reported were recurrence of varicose veins and hemorrhoids in 1 women who withdrew, and complaints of mastalgia, nausea, dysmenorrhea, migraine,
headache
, backache and vaginal discharge.
Australas J
Dermatol
1991
PMID:An open study of Triphasil and Diane 50 in the treatment of acne. 183 45
We describe a patient with acute myelomonocytic leukemia who demonstrated leukemic cell infiltration to scratched wounds and scars from trauma. A 65-year-old Japanese woman developed low grade fever,
headache
and exanthema. Hematology testing disclosed leukocytosis of 95,600/mm3 with 65% monocytes and 9% blast cells. Infiltrated erythema and nodules were disseminated over most of her body. Moreover, linear scratched wounds and traumatic scars were indurated. Skin biopsy showed dense atypical mononuclear cell infiltration with monocytic characteristics. We discuss the possible reasons for the infiltration of leukemia cells into the wounds and scars from trauma.
J
Dermatol
1991 May
PMID:Leukemia cutis in acute myelomonocytic leukemia: infiltration to minor traumas and scars. 193 54
Thirty-six patients with vitiligo were treated with oral 5-methoxypsoralen (5-MOP) and subsequently exposed to UVA irradiation. The patients were treated once or twice weekly over a period of 2-10 months, taking 40-60 mg of 5-MOP 2 hours before exposure to UVA light. The amount of exposure to UVA light was slowly increased according to the patient's tolerance. Eleven (31%) patients showed remarkable repigmentation of the areas of vitiligo within six months. Overall, 78% of the patients showed effective repigmentation. Areas of vitiligo on the face and trunk were more responsive to treatment than those on the distal part of limbs. Adverse effects due to the drug included 2 patients with nausea and 1 patient with
headache
. It is suggested that treatment with systemic 5-MOP is effective, safe, and useful in selected cases of vitiligo.
J
Dermatol
1991 Jun
PMID:Treatment of vitiligo with oral 5-methoxypsoralen. 193 61
A rapidly enlarging left inguinal adenitis, with positive groove sign, and fever, chills, malaise, hypotension,
headache
, scarlatiniform rash, choleroid diarrhea, and proteinuria developed in an homosexual man who was positive for human immunodeficiency virus. The needle aspiration of the inguinal mass showed group A beta-hemolytic streptococci and the blood cultures were negative, suggesting group A streptococcal cellulitis-adenitis with toxic strep syndrome. Treatment with penicillin and surgical drainage was successful. Bacterial infections associated with defective humoral immunity appear to be common in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), and some of these infections have a remarkable extensive and lethal evolution. Therefore streptococcal adenitis should be considered in any patient with AIDS or AIDS-related syndrome in whom rapidly enlarging inguinal nodes develop.
J Am Acad
Dermatol
1991 Feb
PMID:Group A streptococcal cellulitis-adenitis in a patient with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 199 49
Fifty-five patients with griseofulvin-unresponsive dermatophytosis caused by Trichophyton rubrum were treated with itraconazole. They had either tinea corporis or "dry type" infections of the palms, soles, or nails. The following sites were affected: trunk (12 infections), soles (47), toe webs (52), palms (26), fingernails (29), and toenails (42). Patients were treated with oral itraconazole until clinical and mycologic remission were achieved. Response rates and mean times to recovery were as follows: trunk, 100%, 1.5 months; soles, 83%, 6.7 months; toe webs, 90%, 7.2 months; palms, 96%, 4.6 months; fingernails, 90%, 5.4 months; and toenails, 76%, 10.3 months). In a 6-month follow-up period 7 of 30 patients with toenail infections who had responded to treatment had a clinical and mycologic relapse, usually of one nail. Side effects were minimal but included abdominal discomfort (three patients),
headache
(one), and weight gain (two). No persistent abnormalities in blood biochemistry were seen, even in patients who received itraconazole for more than 9 months.
J Am Acad
Dermatol
1990 Sep
PMID:Itraconazole in the management of chronic dermatophytosis. 217 Apr 75
In a double-blind randomized study, 92 patients with culturally proven tinea corporis and/or tinea cruris were treated orally with either terbinafine (Lamisil) (125 mg b.i.d.) or griseofulvin (500 mg b.i.d.) for up to 6 weeks. The two groups of patients and distribution of the target lesions were similar, but the analysis of the clinical scores showed that the terbinafine group had slightly higher mean scores at baseline (P = 0.186). At the end of therapy the proportion of patients with negative microscopy and culture was 78% in the terbinafine group and 83% in the griseofulvin-treated group. At the assessment 8 weeks after the end of therapy the percentages of terbinafine- and griseofulvin-treated patients with negative mycology were 93 and 95%, respectively. There were three relapses after mycological cure in the griseofulvin group (8%) and two in the terbinafine group (4%). Griseofulvin-treated patients were treated for shorter periods than terbinafine-treated patients (i.e. 58% compared to 26% received only 2-4 weeks of therapy). In terms of overall effectiveness, there were no significant differences between the two treatments. Thirty-seven terbinafine patients (77%) compared to 36 griseofulvin patients (82%) had overall effective therapy. Eight terbinafine patients (16%) compared to 10 griseofulvin patients (20%) experienced at least one adverse event. Five patients in the terbinafine group and six in the griseofulvin group had to stop the treatment due to
headaches
or gastrointestinal disorders. One terbinafine patient had an elevation of liver function tests after 6 weeks of treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Clin Exp
Dermatol
1990 May
PMID:A comparative double-blind study of terbinafine (Lamisil) and griseofulvin in tinea corporis and tinea cruris. 219 15
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