Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

With the increased number of immunocompromised patients there has been a concomitant increase in patient morbidity and mortality due to fungi. The etiologic microorganisms vary depending upon the type of immune dysfunction. Patients with malignancies and chemotherapy-induced neutropenia commonly are infected with Candida and Aspergillus. Other ubiquitous fungi such as Rhizopus, Fusarium, and Trichosporon are more frequently implicated as agents of disease in these patients. Patients with cell-mediated immune dysfunction such as acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) are susceptible to mucocutaneous candidiasis and pulmonary and disseminated cryptococcosis. Histoplasmosis and coccidioidomycosis have been particularly lethal infections in AIDS patients. Contributing factors such as broad-spectrum antibiotic use, intravenous catheterization, malnutrition, hyperalimentation, multiple surgical procedures and/or trauma, and steroids used either singly or in combination may also predispose patients to invasive fungal disease. Definitive diagnosis is often difficult to establish and usually requires invasive biopsy. Delay of culture results due to the time required to process specimens and to allow the fungus to grow also contributes to the poor results of therapy. Biopsy of skin lesions represents a useful technique for making a diagnosis. Recent advances in antifungal therapeutics promise to change the current approach to treatment for several of the mycoses. The availability of new oral azoles with spectra of activity that include aspergillosis and cryptococcosis, which currently require treatment with parenteral amphotericin B, may prove practical for prolonged oral therapy of otherwise lethal mycoses.
...
PMID:Fungal infections in the immunocompromised host. 268 23

Rats with colonic cancer were given a palatable liquid diet which enabled them to gain weight while those fed on stock diet, either ad libitum or in restricted amounts, lost weight. Protein synthesis was measured in vivo using a flooding dose technique. Increased nutrient intake caused increases in the rate of protein synthesis in muscle, liver and non-diseased parts of the colon, but had no effect on protein synthesis in the tumours. These data suggest that enteral hyperalimentation may be safely employed in the preoperative management of patients with cancer, as it is likely to stimulate nitrogen retention in the host tissues without increasing the growth rate of the tumour.
...
PMID:Effect of nutritional supplementation on protein synthesis in tumour and host tissues of rats with colonic cancer. 276 29

Eighty-two patients, ranging in age from 11 months to 24 years, underwent the percutaneous placement of an implanted catheter in order to have improved venous access. Thirty-five patients (43%) were beginning chemotherapy for cancer, four (5%) had a chronic hematologic disorder, and the remaining 43 (52%) were on chemotherapy for cancer. The mean duration of catheter function was 168 days (range of 7-1,030 days), with a cumulative experience of 18,812 days of catheter use. Complications were minimal. Only four catheters (5%) required removal secondary to infection, infiltration, or tissue breakdown. Substantially reduced complication rates were observed as compared to other studies using implanted central venous catheters. Implanted central venous catheters were proven to be safe in patients with hematologic disorders. These catheters enhance the ability to infuse chemotherapy, hyperalimentation, blood products, anesthesia, and imaging solutions and are safe to use in patients with a hemostatic or host defense deficiency.
...
PMID:Experience with minimal complications in implanted catheters in children. 278 56

The effect of central iv hyperalimentation (IVH) as an adjunct to aggressive antineoplastic therapy for small cell carcinoma of the lung was evaluated in a randomized trial with 119 evaluable patients. IVH was given over a 28-day period with higher caloric and protein intake for patients nutritionally depleted on entry in the study; all patients were escalated in caloric and protein intake to maximize nutritional repletion. Combination chemotherapy and radiation therapy induced a 45.5% complete response rate and an overall response rate of 92.8%. Median survival for patients with limited disease was 18 months; median survival for patients with extensive disease was 11 months. Patients randomized to receive IVH did not have a better response rate (P = 0.97) or survival (P = 0.78) than control patients. IVH did not significantly alter the survival for patients who at baseline had greater than 5% pretreatment weight loss, low caloric intake, decreased serum albumin, or reduced total iron-binding capacity. Significantly more febrile episodes were seen in IVH patients than in control patients (P less than 0.001). Short-term IVH to patients with this malignancy who are capable of enteral alimentation cannot be routinely recommended as adjunctive therapy.
Cancer Treat Rep 1985 Feb
PMID:Effect of adjuvant central iv hyperalimentation on the survival and response to treatment of patients with small cell lung cancer: a randomized trial. 298 91

Sixty-five patients with small cell bronchogenic carcinoma received their first two of three courses of intensive induction chemotherapy with (30 patients) or without (35 patients) intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH). Patients predominantly had extensive disease (55%), Zubrod's performance status 0 to 2 (63%) and less than or equal to 6% pretreatment weight loss (68%). Both treatment arms were comparable by prognostic factors. The chemotherapy included six remission induction courses of ECHO chemotherapy (E: epipodophyllotoxin VP-16-213; C: cyclophosphamide; H: hydroxydaunorubicin; O: oncovin [vincristine]) followed by six courses of maintenance with PRIME (PR: procarbazine; I: ifosfamide; ME: methotrexate). Prophylactic brain irradiation was given to all patients. Patients with limited disease received chest irradiation at the completion of ECHO. Fifty of 52 (96%) evaluable patients responded with a complete (56%) or partial (40%) remission. The complete remission (CR) rate was higher in the control arm (66% versus 43%; P = 0.11). Response duration and survival of patients was similar for both treatment arms. Combined median survival duration for all patients with limited and extensive disease was 15.75 and 11.50 months, respectively. Combined median survival duration for CR patients with limited and extensive disease was 25 and 13 months, respectively. Administration of IVH did not ameliorate the hematologic, gastrointestinal and infectious morbidity of ECHO chemotherapy. The IVH was effective in preserving body weight and improving delayed hypersensitivity reaction to a battery of skin test antigens. Administration of intensive ECHO chemotherapy to patients with small cell bronchogenic carcinoma resulted in high response rates, acceptable toxicities and improved survival. Administration of IVH did not improve the short- and long-term results of chemotherapy, and did not ameliorate its morbidity. Nutritional support, however, was helpful in preventing patient's weight loss.
Cancer 1987 Jan 15
PMID:Long-term effects of intravenous hyperalimentation administered during intensive chemotherapy for small cell bronchogenic carcinoma. 302 5

The interactions of cancer and malnutrition are discussed with the focus on aging. To establish whether the elderly are more likely to develop cancer cachexia and its complications, this review encompasses the pathogenesis of malnutrition in cancer; the age-related alterations of appetite, gastrointestinal function, energy expenditure, and protein turnover; the diagnosis of malnutrition; and the effectiveness of nutritional support in the elderly. Although metabolic and physiologic changes induced by cancer and age appear synergistic in causing cachexia, more frequent complications of malnutrition have not been observed in the geriatric cancer patients. This may be due to only a small proportion of the elderly with cancer being enrolled in clinical studies or to a reduced cachexia-inducing ability of tumors in these patients. A limited number of studies indicate nutritional replenishment is obtainable in malnourished elderly by hyperalimentation. As restoration of the lean body mass may be slower in older patients, early institution of nutritional support is recommended in malnourished elderly or elderly at risk for malnutrition during neoplastic treatment.
...
PMID:Nutrition, cancer, and aging: an annotated review. II. Cancer cachexia and aging. 308 18

A collaborative study of the humoral and cellular immune status of patients with carcinoma of the Head and Neck (H&N) was conducted at the West Virginia University (WVU) hospital. In addition, blind-coded serum panels were supplied on H&N cancer patients being treated at the National Cancer Institute (NCI). Serum protein analysis of the WVU study groups revealed that at the pretreatment sampling, the alpha-1 acid glycoprotein (AGP), total complement, and IgA levels were significantly elevated. The AGP levels and total complement levels declined to normal levels in the post-treatment period, whereas the IgA levels remained elevated throughout the entire observation period. Levels of serum immune complexes (SIC) were measured in both the WVU and NCI H&N cancer populations using the polyethylene glycol (PEG) precipitation method. In both survey populations all cancer groups had significantly elevated levels of SIC when compared to any of the control populations. The SIC levels never returned to comparative normal values even in cases after successful treatment. A subpopulation of the WVU-H&N cancer study group underwent a short course of intravenous hyperalimentation prior to their treatment regimen. These patients demonstrated a transient decrease in their SIC levels as well as a concomitant increase in their in vitro cell-mediated immune (CMI) correlates. The analysis of in vitro CMI correlates of the WVU study group using both polyclonal mitogens and specific antigens demonstrated a significant depression in these parameters pretreatment and post-treatment. In addition, it was observed that the time course for elevation of selected serum proteins (i.e., IgA and SIC) correlated with concomitant drops in CMI activity. Investigations were also conducted into the effects of immune complex-rich serum fractions upon selected in vitro CMI correlates. Significant blockage of a normal donor leukocyte migration-inhibition assay was demonstrated. Also, a similar inhibition of the ability of normal human lymphocytes to form high affinity rosettes was accomplished with serum from H&N cancer patients.
Cancer 1986 Jun 15
PMID:Immune complexes, serum proteins, cell-mediated immunity, and immune regulation in patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. 308 60

In order to investigate the relation of weight loss and intravenous hyperalimentation therapy to low T3 syndrome, serum T3, T4. rT3 and TBG were determined by radioimmunoassay in 105 cancer patients. The cancer patients were classified into 3 groups, Group I, II and III depending on the grade of weight loss, ranging up to a 5% change in weight loss from a healthy condition, from 5 to 9%, and more than 10%, respectively. Cancer patients under age 59 showed no significant difference in serum T3, T4, rT3 and TBG among these 3 groups. However serum T3 and T3/T4 in cancer patients at age 60 and over were significantly reduced in group III, compared to groups I and II. Serum rT3 values were significantly elevated in group III of elderly cancer patients. The incidence of low T3 syndrome in group III of elderly cancer patients was also significantly higher than in groups I and II. In three out of 5 cancer patients with low T3 syndrome, serum T3 values increased after the intravenous hyperalimentation therapy, whereas no significant change in serum T3 values was observed in two patients who died within one day after the final examination. It is concluded that weight loss produced different effects on peripheral conversion of T4 to T3 between cancer patients under age 59 and over age 60 and glucose plays an important role in the pathogenesis of low T3 syndrome except cases with very poor prognosis.
...
PMID:Low T3 syndrome in cancer patients in relation to weight loss, intravenous hyperalimentation therapy and age. 308 38

The effect of combination chemotherapy on human small intestinal morphology and disaccharidase activities and their relation with clinical and chemical (fecal wet weight and K-excretion) parameters for gastrointestinal toxicity were evaluated in patients with disseminated malignant melanoma receiving enteral normoalimentation (NA). Also evaluated were the supposed protective effects on gastrointestinal toxicity of enteral hyperalimentation (HA) with an elemental diet. After chemotherapy, a comparable decrease in villus height, total mucosal height, and mitotic index was found in jejunal biopsy specimens of both groups. However, in the NA group, the crypt depth decreased (in contrast to the HA group), whereas the disaccharidase activities in the HA group deteriorated to lower values than in the NA group. The authors found no correlation between disaccharidase levels and mucosal morphology, nor was there a correlation between these variables, fecal parameters and clinical diarrhea, suggesting that diarrhea occurring after chemotherapy was not due to loss of mucosal tissue or decrease in enzyme activities. A protective effect of HA with an elemental diet on gastrointestinal toxicity could not be established.
Cancer 1986 Nov 01
PMID:Gastrointestinal toxicity of chemotherapy and the influence of hyperalimentation. 309 54

Both the presence of cancer and oncologic therapy cause metabolic alterations that may decrease the ability of the host to maintain anabolism. Nutritional support, properly administered, will replenish lean body mass, visceral proteins, and immunocompetence in human beings and experimental animals with small to modest tumor burdens. To date, stimulation of tumor growth by intravenous hyperalimentation in malnourished patients has not been documented scientifically. The exact role of intravenous hyperalimentation, in combination with chemotherapy or radiation therapy, is controversial, whereas the role of nutritional support for the malnourished surgical patient is more firmly established.
...
PMID:Value of nutritional support in adult cancer patients. 309 46


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>