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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The objective of this study was to define the severe neurological complications that occur in recipients of an orthotopic liver transplantation, receiving
FK 506
as their primary immunosuppressive agent. To accomplish this, 100 consecutive orthotopic liver transplantation patients were followed prospectively from the time of their transplant until the date of their initial post-orthotopic liver transplantation discharge from hospital. All major neurological complications occurring during this period were recorded and assessed. The frequency of severe neurological complications occurring in these severely ill transplant recipients was 34%. Delirium was noted in 16, coma in 9, seizures in 4, and 5 developed focal motor deficits associated with the finding of a brain abscess, transient ischemic attack or central pontine myelinolysis. At the time at which a major neurologic complication was noted, the blood level of
FK 506
was recorded. No direct relationship between
FK 506
blood levels and the presence or absence of major neurologic complications of orthotopic liver transplantation could be demonstrated. Based upon this series, it can be concluded that although
FK 506
may contribute to the pathogenesis of minor neurological complications seen after orthotopic liver transplantation such as tremors and
headaches
, the pathogenesis of most of the major neurologic complications occurring after orthotopic liver transplantation is multifactorial and cannot be ascribed solely to
FK 506
toxicity.
...
PMID:Severe neurological complications following orthotopic liver transplantation in patients receiving FK 506 and prednisone. 752 72
Neurological complications are important contributors to morbidity and mortality after liver transplantation. We reviewed 391 patients who underwent 427 consecutive orthotopic liver transplantations to analyze the clinical features of patients who experienced one or more neurological complication (74 patients [19%]) and to compare postoperative neurological problems in adults versus children. Neurological complications were more frequent in adults (64 of 273 patients [23%]) than children (10 of 118 patients [8%]) (P < 0.01). The most common neurological complication was encephalopathy (59%), which ranged widely in severity and occurred with similar frequency in adults and children. Other common neurological complications were seizures (12 patients), brachial plexus and peripheral nerve injuries (16 patients, 15 of whom were adults), stroke (5 patients), and central nervous system infections (5 patients). In 27 patients, drug toxicity was the primary cause of neurological complications, all of which reversed with dosage reduction or discontinuation of drug. Cyclosporine and
FK506
, primarily during intravenous administration for induction of immunosuppression, accounted for 25 of 27 drug-induced neurological complications, which included encephalopathy, seizures, severe tremor, and severe
headache
. Despite a higher rate of neurological complications in adults, those in children were more severe and associated with a higher mortality rate. When compared with liver transplant recipients without neurological complications, patients with neurological complications had a higher posttransplant mortality rate (14% vs. 5% for adults, and 50% vs. 7% for children). In conclusion, neurological complications after liver transplantation are more common in adults, more severe and associated with a higher mortality rate in children, and associated with a higher mortality rate in both children and adults when compared with transplant recipients without neurological complications.
...
PMID:Neurological complications of liver transplantation in adult versus pediatric patients. 807 14
FK506
(
Tacrolimus
) is an immunosuppressive drug that blocks the activation of antigen-specific T lymphocytes, a major component in the pathogenesis of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). This study was designed to obtain first estimates of the safety and efficacy of
FK506
monotherapy in the prevention of GVHD following HLA-identical sibling marrow transplantation. Additionally, a subset of patients was studied to define the pharmacokinetic profile of
FK506
. Twenty-seven adult patients with leukemia or myelodysplasia received
FK506
starting the day before transplant at a dose of 0.04 mg/kg/d by continuous intravenous infusion. When clinically possible,
FK506
was given orally in two divided doses starting at five times the daily intravenous dose.
FK506
doses were adjusted to target a steady state or trough blood level between 10 to 30 ng/mL. These patients were followed for 6 months posttransplant. All patients had sustained marrow engraftment. Frequently noted adverse events included reversible renal dysfunction, diarrhea, fever, nausea, vomiting, and
headache
. Most patients required
FK506
dose reductions associated with elevated serum creatinine. Two (7%) patients relapsed, one of whom died of the disease within the 6-month study period. A second patient died due to pulmonary mucor. Whole blood pharmacokinetic parameters indicated a half-life of 18.2 +/- 12.1 hours; volume of distribution of 1.67 +/- 1.02 L/kg; clearance of 71 +/- 34 mL/h/kg; and bioavailability of 32 +/- 24%. Eleven of 27 (41%) patients developed grade II to IV acute GVHD, including 10 grade II and one grade III. Six of 24 (25%) evaluable patients developed chronic GVHD. These data indicate that
FK506
monotherapy has activity in preventing GVHD. Further studies of
FK506
with lower doses to improve tolerability and in combination with other immunosuppressants to augment efficacy are warranted.
...
PMID:FK506 (Tacrolimus) monotherapy for prevention of graft-versus-host disease after histocompatible sibling allogenic bone marrow transplantation. 860 72
Dose-response relationships for anti-CD3 monoclonal antibody (mAb) therapy remain undefined, particularly with respect to higher dose ranges. The clinical efficacy and safety of an OKT3 dosing regimen that incorporates higher doses (escalating dose regimens) was examined in a pilot trial. Patients undergoing acute rejection were treated with a 7-d course of OKT3 in which the daily OKT3 dose was escalated during treatment course (daily doses 5, 5, 5, 5, 10, 15, 25 mg). The total amount of OKT3 given was equal to a standard 14-d course (70 mg). A total of 10 primary cadaveric renal transplant recipients were treated, and data analyzed from a median follow up of 5 months (range 3-13 months). Pre-OKT3 immunosuppressive therapy consisted of ATGAM induction therapy (n = 8), and corticosteroid rejection therapy (n = 6, 18.6 +/- 11.4 mg/kg). Median time of first rejection was 32 d (12-48 d) and median time to OKT3 was 33 d (range 15-42 d). Pre-OKT3 histology (by Banff criteria) included: mild ACR (n = 6), moderate ACR (n = 2), AVR (n = 1), ACR and acute transplant glomerulopathy (n = 1). Rejection reversal rate with escalating dose OKT3 was 100%, and each patient experienced a rapid reversal of rejection (i.e. reversal within 14 d initiation of OKT3 therapy). Six recurrent rejection episodes were diagnosed in 5 patients with a median time to recurrent rejection of 30 d following cessation of OKT3 therapy. All recurrent rejection episodes were successfully treated (
FK 506
n = 4, corticosteroids n = 1, and OKT3 n = 1). CMV disease was limited to a single episode of CMV viremia in one patient. PTLD was observed in one patient who had coexisting vascular rejection at the time of PTLD diagnosis. Short- and long-term graft function is excellent (pre-rejection baseline creatinine 1.8 +/- 0.4 mg/dl, current creatinine 1.75 +/- 0.4 mg/dl). Monitoring of OKT3 serum levels revealed that patients maintained therapeutic serum levels for an average of 4 d following the last OKT3 dose. Circulating CD3+ and CD5+ cells were maintained below baseline levels for at least 10 d following the last OKT3 dose. Anti-OKT3 antibody formation occurred in 22% of patients, however, anti-idiotypic responses were of low titer. Adverse reactions experienced during dose escalation were minimal compared to first dose reactions, and consisted primarily of mild
headaches
and arthralgias in a minority of patients. OKT3 EDR, by obviating monitoring and administration costs, are cost effective [OKT3 EDR $8088, OKT3 SDR (10 d) $9684, OKT3 SDR (14 d) $13,224]. In conclusion, escalating dose regimens of OKT3: 1) provide rejection reversal rates similar to standard dose regimens, 2) provide high OKT3 serum levels and reliable CD3+ cell depletion, 3) induce minimal adverse reactions during dose escalation, and 4) may decrease costs by obviating the need for monitoring peripheral blood T cells and by decreasing administration costs and outpatient visits.
...
PMID:OKT3 escalating dose regimens provide effective therapy for renal allograft rejection. 888 15
A 40-year-old Asian man, 6 months post renal transplant and receiving tacrolimus therapy, presented to the emergency department with a complaint of sudden-onset left eye pain with blurred vision,
headache
on the left side, and nausea and vomiting. On being admitted, the patient was intubated for respiratory depression, and erythromycin was initiated for suspected atypical pneumonia.
Tacrolimus
concentrations (whole blood) drawn on the 3rd day of hospitalization were reported to be > 60.0 ng/ml. Before hospitalization, tacrolimus concentrations were reported to be 9.8 ng/ml on a maintenance dose of 7 mg twice daily. Six days after discontinuation of erythromycin and a decrease in tacrolimus dose, the concentration decreased to 11.5 ng/ml and the original dose of tacrolimus was restarted. It is recommended that concurrent administration of erythromycin and tacrolimus be avoided. However, if concomitant therapy is necessary, tacrolimus concentrations, serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, and urine output should be monitored.
...
PMID:Interaction between tacrolimus and erythromycin. 902 62
Organ transplantation has become a practical and effective option for patients with acute and/or chronic irreversible organ disease. However, solid organ transplantation is associated with many different complications which depend upon the specific surgical procedure and/or confounding medical problems (e.g. rejection, infection, adverse effect of immunosuppressive agents) experienced by a given patient.
Tacrolimus
and cyclosporin A are immunosuppressive drugs used to prevent rejection following allogeneic solid organ transplantation. Adverse events are common with both drugs and include long-term organ dysfunction, opportunistic infections, haematopoietic alterations, nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity. Neurological complications, both central and peripheral, occur in 10-42% of transplant recipients using either of these two immunosuppressive agents. Two cases of reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy manifested by
headache
, nausea and seizures associated with the use of immunosuppressive drugs following liver transplantation are reported.
...
PMID:Immunosuppressive drug-induced leukoencephalopathy in patients with liver transplant. 961 93
Tacrolimus
(FK-506) is an important immunosuppressive agent most often given for maintenance immunosuppression to prevent acute cellular organ rejection. A 57-year-old woman with end-stage renal disease presumed secondary to chronic glomerulonephritis underwent a living related renal allograft transplantation. She tolerated the surgery well and was discharged on postoperative day 5. She was stabilized with prednisone, azathioprine, and tacrolimus. Two years after transplantation, nefazodone 50 mg twice/day orally was prescribed due to depression. After 1 week of nefazodone therapy the patient experienced
headache
, confusion, and "gray areas" in her vision, without abnormal ophthalmologic findings. Her serum creatinine was elevated to 2.2 mg/dl (baseline 1.5 mg/dl), and trough tacrolimus level was markedly elevated (> 30 ng/ml). Both tacrolimus and nefazodone are metabolized by the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 3A4 system. We suspect that nefazodone inhibits metabolism of tacrolimus. Coadministration of antidepressant agents such as nefazodone, or any other drug that inhibits the CYP3A4 isoenzyme subfamily, should be anticipated to interfere with tacrolimus metabolism. Monitoring blood concentrations of tacrolimus is vital, and appropriate dosage adjustments are required when the two drugs are administered concurrently to avoid serious interactions such as nephrotoxicity and neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:Interaction between tacrolimus and nefazodone in a stable renal transplant recipient. 985 39
Thirty adults with leukemia or lymphoma transplanted with marrow or blood stem cells from 1-antigen mismatched related donors received tacrolimus and minidose methotrexate to prevent acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). The group had a median age of 42 years (range 18-56 years). Twenty-seven patients had advanced disease, and 13 were resistant to conventional therapy.
Tacrolimus
was administered at 0.03 mg/kg/day i.v. by continuous infusion from day -2, converted to oral at four times the i.v. dose following engraftment, and continued to day 180 post-transplant. Methotrexate 5 mg/m2 was given i.v. on days 1, 3, 6 and 11. Mild nephrotoxicity was common before day 100; 69% of patients had a doubling of creatinine, 56% had a peak creatinine greater than 2 mg/dl, and two patients were dialyzed. Other toxicities prior to day 100 thought to be related to tacrolimus included hypertension (45%), hyperkalemia (17%), hyperglycemia (14%), seizures (13%),
headache
(3%) and hemolytic uremic syndrome (3%). Grades 2-4 GVHD occurred in 59% (95% CI, 38-70%), and grades 3-4 GVHD in 17% (95% CI, 1-32%). Overall survival at 1 year was 29% (95% CI, 12-45%). We conclude that tacrolimus and minidose methotrexate is active post-transplant immunosuppression for patients with 1-antigen mismatched donors.
...
PMID:Tacrolimus and minidose methotrexate for prevention of acute graft-versus-host disease after HLA-mismatched marrow or blood stem cell transplantation. 1051 80
Tacrolimus
is an effective immunosuppressant in the rescue of liver allograft patients in whom conventional immunosuppression failed. Efficacy and safety were examined in a multicenter trial of liver transplant recipients converted to tacrolimus because of rejection despite cyclosporine (CyA) therapy or intolerance to CyA. Six hundred seventy-seven patients were enrolled onto the study; 475 patients for rejection, 197 patients for intolerance, and 5 patients treated compassionately. The mean daily dose of tacrolimus was less in the intolerance (Int) patients throughout the study: 0.22 versus 0.17 mg/kg at 1 week and 0.14 versus 0.11 mg/kg at 24 months in rejection (Rej) and Int patients, respectively. Mean blood levels paralleled dosing in both groups, but were greater in the Rej patients (10.7 v 8.3 ng/mL at 18 months). Kaplan-Meier estimates of patient and graft survival were similar in the two groups. Patient survival rates were 80.1% and 81.5%, and graft survival rates were 72.7% and 73.9% at 24 months in the Rej and Int patients, respectively. Most adverse events occurred with a similar incidence in the two groups. Those with a 4% or greater incidence were fever, viral hepatitis, and pneumonia. The incidence of sepsis, gastrointestinal hemorrhage, kidney failure, and convulsion was greater in the Int group. The incidence of abnormal liver function test results, hyperglycemia,
headache
, and abnormal kidney function was greater in the Rej group. Mean liver function test results decreased with time postrescue in both groups. Mean serum creatinine level increased from baseline to 18 months postrescue in both groups (1.44 to 1.51 mg/dL for Int patients, 1.14 to 1.48 mg/dL for Rej patients). We conclude tacrolimus is safe and effective rescue in liver transplant recipients with rejection or CyA intolerance.
...
PMID:Tacrolimus rescue in liver transplant patients with refractory rejection or intolerance or malabsorption of cyclosporine. The US Multicenter FK506 Liver Study Group. 1054 38
Despite limited understanding of therapeutic aetiopathogenesis of ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease, there is a strong evidence base for the efficacy of pharmacological and biological therapies. It is equally important to recognise toxicity of the medical armamentarium for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Sulfasalazine consists of sulfapyridine linked to 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) via an azo bond. Common adverse effects related to sulfapyridine 'intolerance' include
headache
, nausea, anorexia, and malaise. Other allergic or toxic adverse effects include fever, rash, haemolytic anaemia, hepatitis, pancreatitis, paradoxical worsening of colitis, and reversible sperm abnormalities. The newer 5-ASA agents were developed to deliver the active ingredient of sulfasalazine while minimising adverse effects. Adverse effects are infrequent but may include nausea, dyspepsia and
headache
. Olsalazine may cause a secretory diarrhoea. Uncommon hypersensitivity reactions, including worsening of colitis, pancreatitis, pericarditis and nephritis, have also been reported. Corticosteroids are commonly prescribed for treatment of moderate to severe IBD. Despite short term efficacy, corticosteroids have numerous adverse effects that preclude their long term use. Adverse effects include acne, fluid retention, fat redistribution, hypertension, hyperglycaemia, psycho-neurological disturbances, cataracts, adrenal suppression, growth failure in children, and osteonecrosis. Newer corticosteroid preparations offer potential for targeted therapy and less corticosteroid-related adverse effects. Azathioprine and mercaptopurine are associated with pancreatitis in 3 to 15% of patients that resolves upon drug cessation. Bone marrow suppression is dose related and may be delayed. The adverse effects of methotrexate include nausea, leucopenia and, rarely, hypersensitivity pneumonia or hepatic fibrosis. Common adverse effects of cyclosporin include nephrotoxicity, hypertension,
headache
, gingival hyperplasia, hyperkalaemia, paresthesias, and tremors. These adverse effects usually abate with dose reduction or cessation of therapy. Seizures and opportunistic infections have also been reported. Antibacterials are commonly employed as primary therapy for Crohn's disease. Common adverse effects of metronidazole include nausea and a metallic taste. Peripheral neuropathy can occur with prolonged administration. Ciprofloxacin and other antibacterials may be beneficial in those intolerant to metronidazole. Newer immunosuppressive agents previously reserved for transplant recipients are under investigation for IBD.
Tacrolimus
has an adverse effect profile similar to cyclosporin, and may cause renal insufficiency. Mycophenolate mofetil, a purine synthesis inhibitor, has primarily gastrointestinal adverse effects. Biological agents targeting specific sites in the immunoinflammatory cascade are now available to treat IBD. Infliximab, a chimeric antibody targeting tumour necrosis factor-or has been well tolerated in clinical trials and early postmarketing experience. Additional trials are needed to assess long term adverse effects.
...
PMID:Comparative tolerability of treatments for inflammatory bowel disease. 1108 48
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