Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0018681 (
headache
)
56,091
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The aim of this 16-week trial was to determine the safety and efficacy of a step-care regimen of ramipril, an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor, from the minimal active dose (2.5 mg) in patients treated for mild to moderate hypertension. The trial was conducted by 102 general practitioners in 770 patients with mild to moderate hypertension. After a response rate to a 4-week placebo therapy of 9.1%, 57.0% of patients given active treatment with ramipril responded to daily doses of 2.5 mg. Ramipril 5 mg daily was effective in 55.6% of the remaining patients. There was no apparent statistically significant difference between the treatments with ramipril 10 mg or a combination of ramipril 5 mg +
Lasix
20 mg daily (44.7% and 47.4% response respectively) in a 6-week double-blind arm of the study. In total, more than 90% of patients responded to treatment with ramipril by the end of the study. The incidence of adverse events was generally low, such as
headache
, cough, dizziness, asthenia, cramps and nausea. The incidence of cough appeared to be related both to the dosage of ramipril given and to outbreaks of influenza syndrome. Thirty-eight patients discontinued active treatment as a result of minor events such as cough, dizziness or diarrhoea, and one case each of myalgia and papular rash. There were no significant variations in laboratory parameters during the study, especially fasting blood glucose and apolipoprotein A1 and B. The results of this study provide evidence of the safety and efficacy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The French multicentre study of ramipril in ambulatory patients with mild-to-moderate hypertension. 130 60
Previously, the authors reported that objective pulsatile tinnitus can be the major or only manifestation of benign intracranial hypertension. This report updates the authors' experience with 31 patients managed over the past 7 years. Benign intracranial hypertension should be suspected in all patients with pulsatile-objective tinnitus, especially when the patient is a young, obese female with
headaches
and/or visual disturbances. Papilledema and small ventricles or an empty sella on computerized tomography are almost diagnostic. The diagnosis is confirmed by elevated spinal fluid pressure on lumbar puncture. In such patients, angiography is not indicated.
Furosemide
and acetazolamide are very effective. Ligation of the internal jugular vein is contraindicated.
...
PMID:Objective tinnitus in benign intracranial hypertension: an update. 229 99
An anthropological examination is made of the Esan population living in Ekpoma, Egoro-Haoko, OkhuEsan, and Ubiaja in Edo State, Nigeria, during 1988-89. The focus is on the Esan perception of illness, the Esan health behavior, and the treatment of illness. The sample areas are not densely populated due to migration to urban areas. Traditional or Christian religions are practiced. Piped water, good roads, and electricity are inadequate. Polygyny is widely practiced. The Esan people believe illness is caused by people or natural or supernatural forces. The most common illnesses among children are measles, convulsions, and
headache
, which are attributed to supernatural factors. Diarrhea, vomiting, malaria, smallpox, chicken pox, pneumonia, and tetanus are thought to be due to natural factors. Child mortality due to witchcraft is reduced through the taking of oaths at shrines. Christianity has helped to protect people from the power of witches and wizards. In traditional times, natural illnesses were attributed to poor sanitation, poor nutrition, and lack of good water. Presently, women believe that natural illnesses occur from environmental factors such as overgrown weeds or poor water drainage. Many health programs have improved the situation for prevention and treatment. Adult male illnesses are reported as back and waist pains, sugar disease, hemorrhoids, blindness, and sudden swelling of the body, legs, and knees. Blindness occurs due to supernatural forces caused by a lack of maintaining traditional customs, such as adultery of a wife. When a husband dies of a supernatural illness, the wife is frequently held accountable. Adult females report illnesses from pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum. Miscarriage, hemorrhage, retention of the placenta, and obstructed labor are considered to be due to supernatural factors subsequent to such behaviors as having sex in the afternoon or in the fields. Traditional treatment is dispensed according to the type of illness and is mainly used by adults. Children are treated more quickly than adults. Cost and distance from health services affects use of modern medicine. Mixes of modern and traditional practices are common.
Health
Transit
Rev 1993 Oct
PMID:The socio-cultural context of health behaviour among Esan communities, Edo State, Nigeria. 1014 69
An interdisciplinary group of researchers developed a conceptual and methodological framework to determine the extent of the problem of reproductive morbidity at the community level in Middle Eastern society and then, in turn, to improve reproductive health conditions in women. It conducted an exploratory study in a family planning clinic in Cairo, Egypt; a medical workshop on clarification of the symptomatology of reproductive morbidity; and a focus group in a village in Giza, Egypt, to ensure that the reproductive morbidity questions of interview questionnaires were appropriate and complete. The group tested the accuracy of the questionnaires in 2 villages in rural Giza (509 women). Field workers went to the women's homes to administer the questionnaire on characteristics of the household during the first visit. During the second visit, they administered the questionnaire on reproductive morbidity, and then the social researcher went with the women to the health center so the women could undergo a gynecological examination. 50% of the women had reproductive tract infections, especially vaginitis. 56% had prolapse, and prevalence increased significantly with age. 63% had anemia, especially 14-19 year olds (76%). Just 24 women (5%) had no reproductive morbidity. About 50% had at least 3 reproductive conditions. The leading problems reported by the women were vaginal discharge (77%), dysmenorrhea (71%), perceived delay in conception (48%), stress incontinence (37%), and pain during intercourse (36%). Feeling of heaviness below, probably indicating prolapse, was the only symptom which increased with age (p = .03). 41% had been pregnant in the last 2 years. 77% delivered at home. Leading conditions during pregnancy were
headache
(59%) and discharge (45%), and those after delivery were fever and discharge/inflammation (30% for both). The interdisciplinary group proposed 3 mechanisms which are of utmost importance to policy: conducting similar research in other communities, expansion of reproductive health services at the community level, and implementing changes in the education and training programs of health professionals and social scientists.
Health
Transit
Rev 1993 Apr
PMID:Concepts and measures of reproductive morbidity. 1014 96
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH) is a disorder of increased intracranial pressure of unknown cause. It is a disorder, predominantly of overweight women in the childbearing years. The major morbidity of the disease is visual loss. Damage to the visual system occurs at the optic nerve head. This damage is most likely due to axoplasm flow stasis and resultant intraneuronal ischemia. Management of IIH begins with educating the patient about the disease and its potential outcomes. I recommend modest dieting and following a low-salt regimen with caution against overuse of fluids. Acetazolamide and
Lasix
appear to be efficacious. Patients failing medical therapy have optic nerve sheath fenestration performed if visual loss is the main morbidity. Shunting procedures are considered if
headache
is the main symptom. Most patients respond well to therapy, but idiopathic intracranial hypertension may recur throughout life.
...
PMID:Idiopathic intracranial hypertension: mechanisms of visual loss and disease management. 1087 79
Idiopathic intracranial hypertension (IIH), also known as pseudotumor cerebri, can be a serious vision-threatening disease. Visual acuity, visual fields, and ocular fundus appearance should be followed closely in all patients with IIH. Obese patients with IIH should be encouraged to lose weight. Medications that might cause or exacerbate IIH should be identified and discontinued if possible. Mild
headaches
can be treated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or migraine prophylactic agents. Some patients may not require additional treatment if they are otherwise asymptomatic and have no evidence of vision loss. Symptomatic patients (significant
headache
, visual complaints, tinnitus) or patients with visual field or acuity loss should be treated initially with acetazolamide.
Furosemide
may be a useful second-line agent. If vision loss is progressive despite maximal medical therapy or severe at the time of diagnosis, surgical intervention may be required. Optic nerve sheath fenestration is effective and safe, and may be repeated if initially unsuccessful. Lumboperitoneal shunting is also an option, especially if symptoms of
headache
are prominent and refractory to medical therapy, but it has significant complication and failure rates. Bariatric surgery can be an effective treatment for IIH in severely obese patients, but is not a useful acute intervention. Special issues must be considered when treating IIH in children or pregnant women.
...
PMID:Idiopathic Intracranial Hypertension. 1203 3
Pseudotumor cerebri is an idiopathic disorder characterized by papilledema and elevated intracranial pressure without a mass lesion. Most patients are female and young and are either overweight or have a history of recent weight gain. Other disease states, such as systemic lupus erythematosus, and drugs, such as tetracycline, have also been associated with the development of pseudotumor cerebri. The mechanism is unclear, but is likely related to decreased cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) resorption. Almost all patients have
headache
, but the greatest morbidity of the disorder is visual loss related to optic disc swelling. Common radiographic findings in pseudotumor cerebri include an empty sella, dilation of the optic nerve sheaths and elevation of the optic disc. The CSF, aside from elevated opening pressure, is normal without evidence of infection or inflammation. Treatment of patients with no or mild to moderate visual loss is primarily medical, with acetazolamide as the first-line agent. Acetazolamide decreases CSF production.
Furosemide
and corticosteroids are secondary choices. Optic nerve surgery is reserved for patients with severe visual loss or progression in visual deficits despite medical management.
...
PMID:Pseudotumor cerebri and its medical treatment. 1501 Jul 17
Pain therapies from natural sources date back thousands of years to the use of plant and animal extracts for a variety of painful conditions and injuries. We certainly are all familiar with modern uses of plant-derived analgesic compounds such as opium derivatives from papaverum somniferum and salicylates from willow bark (
Salix
species). Local anesthetics were isolated from coca leaves in the late 1800s. Sarapin, derived from carnivorous pitcher plants, has been injected for regional analgesia in human and veterinary medicine, but efficacy is controversial. Biologic organisms can play important roles in developing an understanding of pain mechanisms, either from isolation of compounds that are analgesic or of compounds that produce pain, hyperalgesia, and allodynia.
Curr Pain
Headache
Rep 2004 Dec
PMID:Biologic poisons for pain. 1550 55
We described a case of systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) complicated with multiple intracerebral hemorrhage. A 52-year-old female with no history of hypertension had been treated with steroid hormone therapy for more than 15 years. Four days before admission, she experienced acute onset of
headache
and nausea. On the day of admission, the patient suffered from
headache
and nausea again followed by a deteriorated level of consciousness. The computed tomographic scan revealed two subcortical hematomas in the right frontal and left temporo-occipital area with atypical findings compared to those of the usual intracerebral hemorrhage. Cerebral angiography demonstrated that cortical arteries around the hematomas were markedly stretched and displaced. Multiple segmental stenosis and irregular lumen of the internal carotid artery and bilateral cortical arteries were possibly representative of vasculopathy.
Transit
time of blood flow was severely delayed with no apparent obstruction of the cerebral arteries, veins and dural sinuses. These findings suggested the existence of severely increased intracranial pressure. Emergent surgical evacuation of the hematomas was successfully performed with a favorable outcome for the patient. Intraoperatively, the brain was congested even after the evacuation of the hematomas. Surgical manipulation was able easily to cause bleeding from the cavity of the hematomas, which was hard to control. It is supposed that vasculopathy including fibrinoid degeneration and vasculitis may have affected the susceptibility of small arteries and veins to rupture in the present case. Subsequent increase of intracranial pressure might cause another hematomas by adding of hemodynamic stress to small vessels apart from those at the site of the first hemorrhage.
...
PMID:[A case of systemic Lupus erythematosus complicated with multiple subcortical hemorrhage]. 1591 70
Healthy donors (HDs) who were mobilized using lenograstim (LENO) and who were undergoing peripheral haematopoietic progenitor cell collection with apheresis (HPC-A) were enrolled in a surveillance protocol. In all, 184 HDs have been assessed with a median follow-up of 62 months (range 2-155). HDs received LENO at a median dose of 10 microg/kg (range 5-15). Bone pain was reported as the most frequent short-term adverse event (71.2%). Other commonly observed short-term symptoms included fatigue (19.0%), fever (5.4%),
headache
(27.7%), nausea (12.0%) and insomnia (22.3%). Spleen size increased in 4.3% of the donors. No vascular disorders or cardiac disease occurred. Long-term follow-up included monitoring of adverse events, neoplastic disease or other pathologies.
Transit
ischaemic attack occurred in one donor (39 months post-donation). One autoimmune event was reported at 28 months post-recombinant human granulocyte (rhG)-CSF (ankylosing spondylitis); one donor with a history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease developed secondary polyglobulia (50 months post-rhG-CSF). One donor was diagnosed with lung cancer at 19 months post-donation. No haematological disease was observed. In conclusion, the short-term safety appears to be verified, whereas, although the study identified no increased risks of malignancy among HDs who received rhG-CSF, long-term safety requires more complete data sets, especially a longer follow-up and a larger number of HDs.
...
PMID:Short and long-term safety of lenograstim administration in healthy peripheral haematopoietic progenitor cell donors: a single centre experience. 1918 33
1
2
Next >>