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Query: UMLS:C0019204 (
hepatocellular carcinoma
)
71,386
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bajiaolian (Dysosma pleianthum), one species in the Mayapple family, has been widely used as a general remedy and for the treatment of snake bite, weakness, condyloma accuminata, lymphadenopathy and tumours in China for thousands of years. However, the textbooks of traditional Chinese medicine mention little about the toxicity of Bajiaolian. Within 1 year, the authors saw five people who manifested nausea, vomiting,
diarrhoea
, abdominal pain, thrombocytopenia, leucopenia, abnormal liver function tests, sensory ataxia, altered consciousness and persistant peripheral tingling or numbness after drinking infusions made with Bajiaolian. The herb was recommended by either traditional Chinese medical doctors or herbal pharmacies for postpartum recovery and treatment of a neck mass,
hepatoma
, lumbago and dysmenorrhoea. Podophyllotoxin is one of the main ingredients of the Bajiaolian root. The clinical manifestations observed in our patients were consistent with podophyllum intoxication. Podophyllotoxin intoxication usually results from the accidental ingestion or topical application of podophyllum resin. However, these cases of Bajiaolian intoxication were iatrogenic and results from 'therapeutic doses' of Bajiaolian cited in the textbooks of traditional Chinese medicine.
...
PMID:Podophyllotoxin intoxication: toxic effect of Bajiaolian in herbal therapeutics. 136 Nov 36
Panipenem/betamipron (PAPM/BP), a new carbapenem, was studied in dermatology. PAPM/BP was used clinically in the treatment of skin and skin structure infections in a multicenter trial. Fifty three patients were enrolled in the trial. Clinical evaluations were made in 50 patients. Most patients received intravenous infusion of PAPM/BP in a dose of 500 mg twice daily. Other dosages were used in some patients. The overall clinical efficacy rate was 78%. When 15 cases of secondary infections were excluded, the rate was 85.7%. Adverse responses were nausea and/or vomiting in 3 patients, redness with itching in 1 patient, headache or head heaviness in 2 patients and
diarrhea
in 1 patient. The patient with redness and itching had also nausea and vomiting. This occurred 1 hour after the start of the first infusion of this drug. After the discontinuation of the treatment the symptoms went away on the next day. Abnormalities in laboratory test results were observed in 7 out of 53 patients. One patient with liver cirrhosis and
hepatocellular carcinoma
developed anemia (RBC 372 x 10(4)/mm3----275 x 10(4)/mm3, Hb 11.9 g/dl----8.8 g/dl, 35.1%----26.0%). Other abnormalities were all mild. Penetration of the drug into skin tissues after intravenous infusion of 500 mg of this drug in skin surgery patients was studied. Skin/serum concentration ratios ranged from 0.20 to 0.97. Skin concentrations were higher than the concentration of PAPM inhibiting 80% of clinical isolates over a period of 6 hours. In rats, skin concentrations were much lower than serum concentrations probably due to the difference in in vivo metabolism of PAPM. A few resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus against PAPM and imipenem (IPM) were isolated. However, PAPM and IPM showed good antibacterial activities compared to other drugs tested. In conclusion, PAPM/BP is considered to be a useful drug in the treatment of skin and skin structure infections.
...
PMID:[A multicenter study on panipenem/betamipron in dermatology]. 161 73
The clinical manifestations of
hepatocellular carcinoma
(
HCC
) are highly nonspecific since they usually mimic those of hepatic cirrhosis, which frequently underlies this neoplasm. The fact that some
HCC
patients present with severe
diarrhea
, an unusual symptom in liver cirrhosis, prompted us to determine the prevalence of
diarrhea
in a series of 23 consecutive
HCC
patients and compare it with that of a control group formed by cirrhotic patients without
HCC
, matched by age, sex, and etiology of the liver disease. All the patients were interviewed about the existence of
diarrhea
(defined as the presence of three or more loose stools per day appearing over three or more days) in the three months prior to admission. Both groups of patients were similar in regards to the degree of liver failure and presence of
diarrhea
-favoring factors. By contrast,
diarrhea
was significantly more frequent among
HCC
cases than among cirrhotics without
HCC
(47.8% vs 8.7%, P less than 0.005).
HCC
patients with
diarrhea
exhibited higher alkaline phosphatase and bilirubin levels and worse liver function, assessed by the Child-Pugh's classification, than patients without
diarrhea
. However, neither tumor size, vascular invasion, or the degree of tumor differentiation were significantly different between these two groups of
HCC
patients. These results show that
diarrhea
is a frequent manifestation of
HCC
in patients with cirrhosis. Therefore, the development of
HCC
in these patients should be suspected upon the appearance of
diarrhea
.
...
PMID:Diarrhea as a presenting symptom of hepatocellular carcinoma. 216 Aug 81
Immunotherapy with interleukin (IL)-2 possesses great potential in the treatment of immune-mediated diseases and cancers. However, only a few reports on a small number of children have appeared in the literature. From March 1988 to March 1989, 11 children and adolescents were treated with IL-2. They included 1 patient with
hepatocellular carcinoma
, 1 with hepatoblastoma, 6 with childhood atopic dermatitis, and 3 with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. The dosages ranged from 10,000 to 50,000 U/kg every 8 hours by intravenous drip. The following side effects were observed: anorexia, fever, and chillness (100%), general malaise (82%), irritability (64%),
diarrhea
(100%), nausea and vomiting (73%), weight gain (82%), edema (82%), abdominal distension (73%), oliguria (82%), cough (91%), dyspnea (27%), pleural effusion (40%), hypotension (82%), skin eruption (82%), oral ulcer (18%), enlarged liver (73%) liver function abnormalities (82%), renal function impairment (36%), electrolyte imbalance (73%), anemia (91%), thrombocytopenia (54%), leukopenia (18%), and eosinophilia (73%). Immunologically, numbers of natural killer cells were increased and natural killer and lymphokine-activated killer cell activities were augmented after IL-2 treatment. There was a tendency for serum levels of IL-2 and receptor IL-2 to decrease, especially in patients with atopic eczema. Ten patients (91%) completed one course (9 to 12 days) of therapy, and the remaining patient interrupted the treatment because of intolerable adverse effects. Clinically, complete remission for 3 months was obtained in 1 juvenile rheumatoid arthritis patient, transient improvement (2 to 6 weeks) in all atopic dermatitis patients, minor response in the hepatoblastoma patient, and no response in the patient with
hepatocellular carcinoma
.
...
PMID:Interleukin-2 immunotherapy in children. 217 36
A total of 20 patients with histologically proven primary
hepatocellular carcinoma
(PHC) received mitoxantrone IV at a dose of 10-16 mg/m2 every 3 weeks. All patients had previous hepatitis B infection. None underwent remission after treatment; 2 had stable disease and 18 progressive disease. The median overall survival was 13 weeks (range, 1-59 weeks). There was no evidence of significant antitumor activity for mitoxantrone in our patients with PHC. Hematotoxicity occurred in 100% of the patients with grades 2-4 leukopenia, 89% of those with grades 1-4 anemia, and 26% of those with grades 2-3 thrombocytopenia. Cardiotoxicity occurred in 20% of the patients after 14-30 mg/m2 mitoxantrone; these included complete heart block with fatal outcome in one case, decreased ventricular ejection fraction in one, and sinus tachycardia in two. Nausea, vomiting, fever,
diarrhea
, and alopecia were mild and occurred in 15%-45% of the patients Therefore, patients with PHC following hepatitis B infection may be less tolerant to mitoxantrone, resulting in the apparent increase in toxicities.
...
PMID:Phase II study of mitoxantrone in unresectable primary hepatocellular carcinoma following hepatitis B infection. 253 94
A randomized double-blind trial of colchicine vs placebo was conducted in 67 patients with histologically proven alcoholic hepatitis, 33 of whom had cirrhosis. Patients with hepatic encephalopathy, ascites, protracted prothrombin time, severe thrombocytopenia,
hepatocellular carcinoma
, evident lack of discipline or refusal to participate in the trial were not included. Thirty-three patients received colchicine (1 mg/day) and 34 received placebo for 6 months. Blood parameters including N-terminal peptide of type III procollagen were assessed in the serum, and a percutaneous liver biopsy was performed at the start of the trial and after 3 and 6 months. Alcoholic hepatitis and fibrosis scores were established for each biopsy specimen. Twenty-eight percent of patients were lost to follow-up at 3 months, and fifty-two percent at 6 months. One patient died of liver failure. Fifty-eight percent of patients were abstaining from alcohol at 3 months and fifty percent at 6 months. No significant effect of treatment was noted. Nevertheless, improvement in alcoholic hepatitis core at 3 months was more important in the colchicine group than in the placebo group. No side-effects were noted except transient
diarrhea
. Our results suggest that colchicine has no important effect on the course of alcoholic hepatitis. A trial including of at least 260 patients might be necessary for the observed alcoholic hepatitis score difference at 3 months, favoring colchicine, to be statistically significant.
...
PMID:Treatment of alcoholic hepatitis with colchicine. Results of a randomized double blind trial. 275 2
A 44-year-old woman with
hepatocellular carcinoma
presented with intractable watery
diarrhea
and her condition was evaluated angiographically. Surgical ablation of the tumor resulted in complete resolution of the
diarrhea
. The tumor cells of the
hepatocellular carcinoma
were found to contain vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, gastrin, and prostaglandinlike immunoactivity. To our knowledge, this is the first report of such an association.
...
PMID:Hepatocellular carcinoma presenting with intractable diarrhea. A radiologic-pathologic correlation. 301 24
The existence of tumors producing prostaglandins is well documented in the literature. At present, no case report of a prostaglandin-producing
hepatocellular carcinoma
has been published, to our knowledge. The authors report a patient with
hepatocellular carcinoma
associated with
diarrhea
mediated by prostaglandins, surviving 30 months after receiving treatment with indomethacin and Adriamycin. The authors will discuss the possible role played by indomethacin in the exceptional clinical course of the patient.
...
PMID:Long survival of diarrhea-associated hepatocarcinoma treated with Adriamycin and indomethacin. A case report. 301 92
Ethiopia is a country of 45 million people in northeast Africa. With a stagnant, agriculture-based economy and a per capita gross national product of $110 in 1984, it is one of the world's poorest nations. 70% of the children are mildly to severely malnourished, and 25.7% of children born alive die before the age of 5. Life expectancy is 41 years. The population is growing at the rate of 2.9%/year, but only 2% of the people use birth control. After the 1974 revolution, the socialist government nationalized land and created 20,000 peasant associations and kebeles (urban dwellers' associations), which are the units of local government. The government has set ambitious goals for development in all sectors, including health, but famine, near famine, forced resettlement programs, and civil war have prevented any real progress from being made. The government's approach to health care is based on an emphasis on primary health care and expansion of rural health services, but the Ministry of Health is allocated only 3.5% of the national budget. Ethiopia has 3 medical schools -- at Addis Ababa, Gondar, and the Jimma Institute of Health Sciences. Physicians are government employees but also engage in private practice. A major problem is that a large proportion of medical graduates emigrate. Ethiopia has 87 hospitals with 11,296 beds, which comes to 1 bed per 3734 people. There are 1949 health stations and 141 health centers, but many have no physician, and attrition among health workers is high due to lack of ministerial support. Health care is often dispensed legally or illegally by pharmacists. Overall, there is 1 physician for 57,876 people, but in the southwest and west central Ethiopia 1 physician serves between 200,000 and 300,000 people. In rural areas, where 90% of the population lives, 85% live at least 3 days by foot from a rural health unit. Immunization of 1-year olds against tuberculosis, diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus, poliomyelitis, and measles is 11, 6, 6, and 12% respectively. Infectious diseases dominate the medical scene in Ethiopia. In 1984, tuberculosis accounted for 11.2% of hospital admissions and 12.2% of deaths. The leading cause of childhood mortality in 1984 was
diarrhea
(45%). Malaria, trypanosomiasis, schistosomiasis, leishmaniasis, and meningococcal meningitis are endemic. Intestinal parasitism is rampant, and the nationwide prevalence of leprosy is 3/1000. Venereal diseases were the 9th most common cause of hospital outpatient visits in 1984, but AIDS is rare. The leading noninfectious diseases are rheumatic and syphilitic heart disease, hypertension, diabetes mellitus,
hepatoma
, and elephantiasis. Ethiopia has the highest number of cases of nonfilarial elephantiasis -- an estimated 350,000 cases -- in the world. Aside from a large influx of money, the most necessary changes to improve the health system are lowering the salaries of doctors and nurses, reorienting physician training toward primary health care, increasing the quality of existing health services, more efficient management, and better coordination between the Ministry of Health and the voluntary organizations.
...
PMID:Health and medical care in Ethiopia. 271 Jan 85
Twenty-one patients with solid tumors were treated with weekly 6-h intravenous infusions of dichloromethotrexate (DCM), with escalating doses every other week. Frequently observed toxicities included leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and mucositis. Nausea, vomiting,
diarrhea
, and elevation of hepatic enzymes and bilirubin occurred less often. The toxicity of DCM was dose-dependent; the maximum tolerated dosage excalation plan was 400 mg/m2 x 2 weeks, 800 mg/m2 x 2 weeks, and then 1,200 mg/m2 weekly. Plasma concentrations of DCM were measured during 61 infusions and apparent half-lives determined. The plasma elimination of DCM appears to be similar to that of methotrexate. Three objective tumor responses seen in the seven
hepatocellular carcinoma
patients treated warrant further investigation.
...
PMID:Evaluation of weekly escalating doses of dichloromethotrexate in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and other solid tumors. 629 94
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