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

The dihydropyridine calcium antagonist nitrendipine offers a pathophysiologically based antihypertensive treatment with a potent dilation of resistance vessels, increased arterial compliance, and an acute natriuretic/diuretic response. Prolonged nitrendipine treatment in essential hypertension is not associated with stimulation of the sympathetic nervous and the renin-angiotensin systems or accumulation of sodium and water. The antihypertensive effectiveness is similar to that of diuretics and beta-blockers, and the responsiveness appears to be greater in elderly and black patients. During long-term (approximately 1 year) nitrendipine treatment in mild to moderate hypertension, the blood pressure reduction is well sustained in "short-term" nitrendipine responders. In patients with severe hypertension, nitrendipine has a potent antihypertensive effect in combination with beta-blockers and/or diuretics. In mild-moderate hypertension, a single daily dose (10-40 mg) may be sufficient, whereas two daily doses (20-80 mg/day) seem necessary in severe hypertension. Common side effects are headache, flush, and palpitations (approximately 20-30%), but these are generally mild and transient. Dizziness and malaise occur in approximately 5%, often later during treatment. Peripheral edema in 5-20% of the patients is generally mild but persistent. Nitrendipine has no adverse effects on glucose and lipid metabolism or on plasma levels of electrolytes and urate. The ultimate aim of antihypertensive treatment is to prevent cardiovascular complications. As for other calcium antagonists, no study on primary prevention of cardiovascular complications in hypertension has been published. With regard to regression of left ventricular hypertrophy accompanying essential hypertension, conflicting results have been found with nitrendipine.
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PMID:Review of long-term trials with nitrendipine. 246 50

Throughout the developed world, populations are growing older. Blood pressure, especially systolic blood pressure, increases with aging, and this increase leads to increased risks of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Clinical trials demonstrate that treatment of hypertension in the elderly reduces overall cardiovascular mortality, cardiac mortality, nonfatal cardiovascular events, congestive heart failure, progression to severe hypertension, and strokes. Drug treatment has been well tolerated, but diuretic therapy has been known to increase plasma glucose, uric acid, and creatinine. Therapeutic trials of nonpharmacologic treatment may be indicated in those with mild elevation in blood pressure and no serious end organ disease. However, most people up to age 80 will require drug treatment. Many drugs are effective in the elderly, but, some like beta-blockers, may not be as effective as in younger patients. Controlled clinical trials demonstrate that nitrendipine, a calcium channel blocking drug, significantly reduced mean systolic and diastolic blood pressure in older hypertensive patients, (successfully controlling pressure in a high percentage) and was well tolerated. Drug effects persist for 12 h or more. The drug decreased the exercise-induced rise in the rate-pressure product. Although there is a temporary increase in heart rate, this returns to baseline after a short time. Side effects include headache, flushing, dizziness, edema, and palpitations. Therefore, nitrendipine offers a reasonable and useful alternative to many other drugs in the treatment of combined systolic and diastolic hypertension in the elderly.
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PMID:Epidemiologic aspects of elderly hypertensive patients and the results of treatment with nitrendipine. 248 68

To evaluate the change of the neurotransmitter function in migraine, a neuroendocrinological study was performed in eleven female migraineurs and nine female controls. Thyrotropin releasing hormone, luteinizing hormone releasing hormone, and insulin were simultaneously loaded (the Triple test). Before and after loading, serum glucose, prolactin (PRL), thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH), luteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, cortisol, human growth hormone and beta-endorphin were measured. The Triple test produced an increase of PRL in both migraine and control groups, but in migraineurs the increase was significantly larger than in controls. TSH also increased in response to the test, but the TSH response in patients was less than in controls, although not significantly so. The responses of other substances showed no significant differences between the two groups. Although dopaminergic hypofunction in migraine has been proposed by some authors, the present findings rather suggest a serotonergic hyperfunction.
Cephalalgia 1989 Sep
PMID:A neuroendocrinological study in female migraineurs: prolactin and thyroid stimulating hormone responses. 250 60

Although calcium antagonists may impair insulin release in vitro, clinical studies have produced conflicting results. Felodipine is a highly selective dihydropyridine calcium antagonist effective in the treatment of hypertension. The efficacy of felodipine was assessed in a double-blind randomized placebo cross-over study of 21 Type 2 diabetic patients with primary hypertension, 13 men and 8 women, with an age of 61 (range 46-73) years. Thirteen were controlled on oral hypoglycaemic therapy and 8 on diet alone. Mean (SD) blood pressure (mmHg) was 176(20)/102(8) after a 2-4 week placebo run-in period, 169(21)/101(8) during the subsequent placebo period compared with 151(15)/88(9) after 4 weeks felodipine therapy (p less than 0.001). Nineteen patients required 5 mg twice daily and 2 patients 10 mg twice daily to achieve a target diastolic pressure of 95 mmHg. Side-effects seen with felodipine included ankle oedema, facial flushing, headache, and dizziness. During oral glucose tolerance tests performed after the felodipine and placebo phases, mean (SD) fasting blood glucose was 9.5(3.1) and 9.0(3.0) mmol l-1, respectively (NS), and the 90 min (peak) blood glucose was 19.1(4.8) and 18.1(4.8) mmol l-1, respectively (NS). Glycosylated haemoglobin and fructosamine concentrations likewise showed no significant changes.
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PMID:A trial of the calcium antagonist felodipine in hypertensive type 2 diabetic patients. 253 42

The metabolic effects of the anti-fungal drug fluconazole were investigated in 18 women, 10 of whom were taking oral contraceptives, to examine whether this steroid antagonist has any effects primarily on hormone systems. The women, aged 29-40, took 50 mg fluconazole orally from Day 1 of their menstrual cycle for 21-28 days. Subjects kept a symptom diary, were tested weekly for hematological and liver function, and were checked for compliance by analyzing blood for drug by GLC. 5 women reported side effects: somnolence, dizziness, fatigue, increased appetite, headache (1) and nausea (1). No effects on liver function or menses were noted. The only significant findings were increases in serum thyroxine and testosterone in fluconazole-only subjects, and increases in insulin and apo-lipoprotein B in fluconazole-oral contraceptive subjects. Pills containing levonorgestrel were used by 9 women, desogestrel by 1. No significant differences were seen in estradiol, progesterone, sex-hormone-binding globulin, thyroid function, cortisol, glucose, C-peptide, cholesterol, triglycerides, lipoproteins. Thus it is unlikely that the short-term use of fluconazole for treatment of superficial mycoses, such as vulvovaginal candidiasis, will adversely affect steroid metabolism in women.
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PMID:Metabolic effects of low-dose fluconazole in healthy female users and non-users of oral contraceptives. 254 10

All cases of mumps meningoencephalitis diagnosed at our institution during the past 15 years were reviewed. There were 24 cases, 16 between 1973 and 1977, 3 between 1978 and 1985 and 5 in 1986 to 1988. Four of the recent cases occurred 19 to 26 days after receipt of a new mumps vaccine (Urabe Am 9 strain) released in Canada in 1986. The remaining 20 cases were clustered in winter and spring. The average age was 6.2 years and the ratio of males to females was 5:1. Clinical presentations were fever (90%), vomiting (90%), meningismus (70%), headache (65%), parotitis (50%) and seizures (30%). The mean cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell count was 513/mm3 (lymphocyte predominance); 55% of patients had a cerebrospinal fluid protein level of greater than 0.4 g/liter, and the cerebrospinal fluid:blood glucose ratio was greater than 0.4 in all. Two patients had adverse sequelae. The clinical and laboratory features of these cases were not significantly different from the vaccine-associated cases.
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PMID:Clinical and epidemiologic features of mumps meningoencephalitis and possible vaccine-related disease. 259 49

A 24-year-old female was admitted to our hospital on Aug. 20 in 1986 because of blurred vision and right pupillary dilatation. She had sometimes noticed headache later than 1976, and blurred vision without headache several times a year later than 1983. She had been told her right pupil dilated when she had complained of blurred vision. Neurological examination revealed abnormal findings as follows; diminished sense of smell in the right side, anisocoria (R 8 mm, L 5 mm), bilateral hippus, hypesthesioalgesia in her right face, left trunk and left arm. The pupils were round and contracted promptly to light. Accommodation reflex and ciliospinal reflexes were normal. Neither blepharoptosis nor external ocular muscle paresis were observed. Deep tendon reflexes were normal. Planter responses were flexor. There was no meningeal irritative sign. No abnormal findings were obtained in blood and urine, chest X-p, brain enhanced CT scan, EEG, and cerebral angiography except for slight degree of anemia. Serum TPHA was negative. However, the cell count of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was 18/mm3 (Ly 100%) and decreased to 9/mm3 (Ly 100%) in nine days. Protein content and glucose level of CSF were normal. Pupils were not constricted by 0.125% pilocarpine instillation. Loss of smell and sensory disturbance disappeared within three days and her pupils became isocoric by five days after admission. The patients of episodic unilateral mydriasis without apparent cause had relatively same clinical features as "unilateral springing pupil" proposed by Hallett et al. (1970). Except for mydriasis, they had no abnormal findings of neurological and laboratory examinations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Recurrent episodic unilateral mydriasis with pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid--a case report]. 259 48

A series composed by 13 patients suffering Tuberculous Meningitis (TM) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is reported. The characteristics of the disease are compared with those obtained from a control group. TM reached a frequency of 18% in the first 66 patients with AIDS and neurologic disorders attended by the authors. The male/female ratio was 12:1. There was lesser frequency of headache in the group with TM and AIDS, but there was a greater frequency of lymph nodes, anemia, leukopenia, hypergammaglobulinemia and elevated ESR that in the control group. These differences were statistically significative. Parabolic and hyperbolic correlations were found between the number of cells and the albumin or glucose concentration in the CSF (and also between the later two parameters) of the patients with TM and AIDS. The treatment was very efficacious, but the proper duration and the long-term results of the therapy are unknown due to the difficult follow-up.
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PMID:[Tuberculous meningitis and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 263 55

Health care practitioners are often faced with the dilemma of whether or not to provide oral contraceptives (OCs) to women who have certain chronic medical conditions. Oral contraceptive use among gestational diabetics who use OCs may be at increased risk for developing insulin- dependent diabetes. It appears that progestins are primarily responsible because they decrease the number of insulin receptors on cell membranes. Norgestrel has a more marked effect on carbohydrate metabolism than norethindrone. Estrogen may also play a role by slowing the uptake of glucose. Findings of available studies show that progestin only OCs, combined, low-dose OCs (35 mcg of ethinyl estradiol), or preparations with norethindrone are relatively safe for gestational diabetics. In mitral valve prolapse (MVP) abnormal hemodynamics at the prolapsed valve may promote formation of thrombi and lead to cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs). Oral contraceptives are also known to increase the incidence of thrombi, especially in the lower extremities. A 1986 study of 11 OC users who had had CVAS found that a specific subject of women with MVP are at risk for CVA, perhaps due to persistent clotting abnormalities, however most could safely use a combined, low-dose pill unless headaches, smoking, and MVP symptoms. Oral contraceptive use has usually been avoided in women with sickle cell disease. The major concern has been the possibility of an additive or synergistic effect of OCs on the blood-clotting mechanism. However sickle cell disease is a relative contraindication. Several studies showed that OC use, even up to 54 months, did not increase sickle cell crises, and only 5 cases of thromboses have been reported. The increase of fetal and maternal mortality, however, is a definite risk, therefore a similar low-dose pill may be safe for women with the sickle cell trait.
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PMID:Oral contraceptive use in women with chronic medical conditions. 267 89

Urapidil is a postsynaptic alpha 1-adrenoceptor antagonist with a pharmacodynamic profile similar to prazosin. Unlike prazosin, however, urapidil also has some central activity which may explain the apparent improved tolerability of urapidil, including the absence of first-dose syncope. In clinical trials urapidil therapy resulted in significant reductions in blood pressure in patients with mild to severe essential hypertension, with little influence on heart rate. It is an effective antihypertensive when administered as monotherapy or in combination with beta-blockers and thiazide diuretics. In the few patients with cardiac dysfunction who have been studied to date, urapidil has improved myocardial oxygen consumption, systemic vascular resistance, left ventricular function, cardiac output and pulmonary capillary wedge pressure; however, further study is needed to assess the full therapeutic potential of urapidil in these patients. Urapidil has also been used successfully in the treatment of hypertensive emergencies, including eclampsia and pre-eclampsia, hypertensive crisis and hypertension occurring during general and cardiac surgery, rapidly lowering blood pressure without altering heart rate. Urapidil does not affect lipid or glucose metabolism, nor does it impair renal function. In addition, urapidil may be beneficial to patients with pulmonary hypertension, in whom it dilates pulmonary vascular beds to a greater extent than systemic vasculature, although therapeutic trials have not examined this effect. The most common adverse effects associated with urapidil therapy are dizziness, nausea, headache, fatigue and palpitations; however, these tend to be mild and transient and usually do not require discontinuation of treatment. Thus, urapidil offers a useful alternative to currently available drugs for the treatment of mild to severe hypertension, either as monotherapy or in combination with other antihypertensive drugs.
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PMID:Urapidil. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, and therapeutic potential in the treatment of hypertension. 269 46


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