Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022116 (ischemia)
91,303 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It is important to establish the diagnosis of temporal arteritis because the disease is treatable; treatment may prevent blindness and even death. Temporal arteritis usually occurs in people older than 51 years of age, although very rarely, histologically documented disease occurs in younger people. The onset may be occult, so that there are few findings. A multitude of signs and symptoms may occur such as fever, headaches, malaise, weight loss, anemia, stroke, cranial nerve palsies, polymyalgia rheumatica, aortitis and other large vessel involvement. The eye may suffer from ischemic optic neuropathy (anterior or posterior), central or cilio-retinal arterial occlusion, ophthalmic artery ischemia, or extraocular muscle palsies. An arterial biopsy showing giant cell arteritis establishes the diagnosis. However, a negative biopsy does not rule out the disease because of the occasional presence of skip areas. Arteriography has only rarely yielded a positive temporal artery biopsy when the initial biopsy done elsewhere was negative. As a diagnostic parameter, the erythrocyte sedimentation rate is nonspecific, being elevated in diseases other than temporal arteritis and sometimes being falsely lowered by technical factors. Furthermore, the temporal artery biopsy is occasionally positive despite a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Treatment is aimed at relieving the patient's symptoms and normalizing the erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Because of the wide spectrum of clinical and laboratory finding in temporal arteritis, no one specific treatment regimen with systemic corticosteroids works for all patients. Temporal arteritis is a well known disease of the elderly which ir rarely fatal but results in significant visual morbidity (Hinzpeter & Naumann, 1976; Spencer & Hoyt, 1960). Since Hutchinson's (1890) description, more than a thousand articles have been written on the subject (Cohen & Smith, 1974). Despite this, many unanswered questions and controversies remain concerning the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment of temporal arteritis. My goal is to review these questions and areas of controversy.
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PMID:Controversies regarding giant cell (temporal, cranial) arteritis. 39 20

Transient mucosal ischemia may cause oxygen-derived free radical production by xanthine oxidase, precipitating pouchitis after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Our aim, therefore, was to determine the effect of allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor, in patients with acute and chronic pouchitis. Acute pouchitis was characterized clinically by sporadic episodes of increased frequency and decreased viscosity of stools, hematochezia, fever, malaise, and pelvic pain, which resolved promptly with treatment. Chronic pouchitis patients required continuous treatment to remain asymptomatic and invariably developed the signs and symptoms of pouchitis within one week following cessation of therapy. Eight patients with acute pouchitis were treated with allopurinol (300 mg p.o. b.i.d.) during the episode. Fourteen patients with chronic pouchitis had their standard antibiotic therapy discontinued while still asymptomatic; they were then given allopurinol (300 mg p.o. b.i.d.) for 28 days. Acute pouchitis resolved promptly in four of eight patients. Seven of the 14 patients with chronic pouchitis responded completely with no recurrence of symptoms during treatment. Allopurinol either terminated an episode of acute pouchitis or prevented pouchitis from recurring in 50 percent of patients. These data support a role for mucosal ischemia and oxygen free radical production in the etiology of pouchitis.
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PMID:Role of oxygen free radicals in the etiology of pouchitis. 156 95

The effect of oxygenation (100% oxygen) of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solutions No. 1 (MacCarthy) and No.2 (Plegisol, Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Ill.) was examined in the isolated working rat heart subjected to long periods (3 hours for studies with solution No. 1 and 4 hours for studies with solution No. 2) of hypothermic (20 degrees C) ischemic arrest with multidose (every 30 minutes) cardioplegic infusion. At the aortic infusion point the oxygen tension of the oxygenated solutions (measured at 20 degrees C) was in the range of 320 to 560 mm Hg whereas that of the nonoxygenated solutions was less than 150 mm Hg. Twenty hearts (10 oxygenated and 10 nonoxygenated) were studied for each solution. The studies with solution No. 1 demonstrated that oxygenation led to a significant (p less than 0.05) reduction in the incidence of persistent ventricular fibrillation during postischemic reperfusion. Oxygenation of the cardioplegic solution also improved postischemic functional recovery so that the recovery of aortic flow was improved from 18.7% +/- 8.9% (of its preischemic control level) in the nonoxygenated group to 54.6% +/- 6.6% in the oxygenated group (p less than 0.025). Creatine kinase leakage was also significantly reduced from 27.5 +/- 4.8 to 9.9 +/- 0.6 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p less than 0.005). Studies with solution No. 2 indicated that protection was better than with solution No. 1, even in the absence of oxygenation. A better degree of functional recovery was obtained after 4 hours of arrest with solution No. 2 than that obtained after only 3 hours of arrest with solution No. 1, and persistent ventricular ventricular fibrillation was never observed with solution No. 2. However, despite the superior performance with solution No. 2, further improvements could be obtained by oxygenation, with that time from the onset of reperfusion to the return of regular sinus rhythm being reduced from 55 +/- 8 to 35 +/- 2 seconds (p less than 0.01), postischemic recovery of aortic flow increasing from 59.8% +/- 7.4% to 85.7% +/- 2.5% (p less than 0.005), and creatine kinase leakage being reduced from 38.1 +/- 7.3 to 16.2 +/- 1.5 IU/15 min/gm dry weight (p less than 0.005). It is concluded that oxygenation of the St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solutions improves their ability to protect the heart against long periods of ischemia and that this is manifested by improved postischemic electrical stability, functional recovery, and reduced creatine kinase leakage.
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PMID:Improved myocardial protection by oxygenation of St. Thomas' Hospital cardioplegic solutions. Studies in the rat. 333 23

Giant-cell arteritis is a polysymptomatic disease of the elderly. Systemic symptomatology includes headaches, arthralgias, myalgias, tender temporal arteries, jaw claudication, low-grade fever, anemia, anorexia, malaise, and weight loss. Visual loss from anterior ischemic optic neuropathy and diplopia resulting from ischemia of the ocular muscles represents the major ocular manifestations of giant cell arteritis. When the diagnosis is suspected, blood for a sedimentation rate should be drawn, and, if it confirms the clinical impression, high dose prednisone should be started immediately and a temporal artery biopsy performed at a later date. Only by asking the proper questions and suspecting the diagnosis will this preventable form of blindness receive the prompt attention it deserves.
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PMID:Giant-cell arteritis. Signs and symptoms. 715 21

Interleukin (IL-4) is a pluripotent cytokine that stimulates proliferation of activated T-cells and has antineoplastic activity against human renal tumors in animal systems. In phase I trials, IL-4 could be tolerated at doses up to 20 micrograms/kg, with dose-limiting toxicities consisting of fever, fluid retention, nasal congestion, and mucositis. We report the results of two separate Phase II trials of IL-4 in 30 patients with metastatic malignant melanoma and 19 patients with advanced renal cancer. IL-4 was administered intravenously every 8 h for 14 doses in two 5-day courses separated by a 9-day interval. The first 27 patients were treated at a dose of 800 micrograms/m2, but after three of these patients developed cardiac toxicities, the dose was decreased to 600 micrograms/m2. One complete response occurred in a patient with metastatic melanoma (duration > or = 30 months). No responses were seen among the patients with renal cancer. The most frequent side effects were fever, nausea, malaise, nasal congestion, and diarrhea. Reversible hepatic and renal dysfunction were also common. Hypotension was infrequent, but transient weight gain due to fluid retention was common. The major life-threatening toxicities were cardiac and gastrointestinal. Suspected cardiac ischemia was observed in two patients, pericarditis in one, and arrhythmias in two. Three patients had major upper gastrointestinal bleeding without evidence of local tumor. We conclude that IL-4, when given as a single agent on this schedule at maximum tolerated dose, does not possess meaningful activity in renal cancer or melanoma.
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PMID:Phase II studies of recombinant human interleukin-4 in advanced renal cancer and malignant melanoma. 813 48

Endotoxemia occurs when intestinal ischemia allows bacterial lipopolysaccharide to translocate from colonic flora into the bloodstream, which triggers release of cytokines that can cause hypotension, rigors, fever, shock, and even death. Recently, blood endotoxin levels were shown to be higher in athletes needing medical attention (330 pg.ml-1) than in their competitors with similar performances (81 pg.ml-1). Though there were no data showing that these athletes had elevated core temperatures or severe illness, speculation followed that endotoxin may play a causal role in heat stroke. We examined the relationship between endotoxemia and mild post-exertional illness in 39 cyclists after a 100-mile ride. Thirteen cyclists had at least one of the following: orthostatic hypotension, rigors, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, or syncope. Only 2/26 case-controls had any of these symptoms. Data were collected on vital signs, hemoglobin, sodium, creatine kinase, creatinine, and uric acid. Endotoxin titer was determined by chromogenic assay; tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) titer was determined by ELISA. One ill cyclist had an endotoxin level of 330 pg.ml-1, one control had an endotoxin level of 150 pg.ml-1, but endotoxin level was < or = 64 pg.ml-1 in all others. Comparison of pre- and post-ride data showed that controls increased creatine kinase activity (154 +/- 34 vs 561 +/- 191 IU.dl, P < 0.05), creatinine concentration (1.5 +/- 0.0 vs 1.6 +/- 0.0 mg.dl-1, P < 0.05), and uric acid concentration (5.4 +/- 0.3 vs 6.3 +/- 0.3 mg.dl-1, P < 0.05). Ill cyclists had lower serum sodium than post-ride controls (138 +/- 2 vs 142 +/- 0.6 mEq.l-1, P < 0.05), but there were no differences between groups in CK, creatinine, or uric acid. These findings suggest that endotoxemia may complicate, but does not cause mild post-exertional illness in cyclists.
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PMID:Exercise-associated collapse in cyclists is unrelated to endotoxemia. 853 21

Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) causes an inflammatory reaction and may lead to ischemic brain damage. Experimental ischemia has been shown to be connected with the alarm-reaction cytokines interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1Ra) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha). Increased levels of these cytokines, however, have not been detected thus far in patients following an SAH event. For this reason daily cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) samples were collected from 22 consecutively enrolled patients with SAH and from 10 non-SAH patients (controls). The CSF samples were studied using immunoassays for IL-1Ra and TNF alpha to investigate whether an SAH caused increased cytokine levels. The mean IL-1Ra levels were significantly higher in patients with SAH who were in poor clinical condition on admission than in those who were in good condition (318 pg/ml vs. 82 pg/ml, p < 0.02). The IL-1Ra levels increased during delayed ischemic episodes and after surgery in patients who were in poor clinical condition. Significant increases in IL-1Ra and TNF alpha were detected during Days 4 through 10 in patients suffering from SAH who eventually had a poor outcome (p < 0.05). Patients with good outcomes and control patients had low levels of these cytokines. The levels of IL-1Ra increased after surgery in patients with Hunt and Hess Grades III through V, but not in those with Grade I or II. This finding indicates that patients in poor clinical condition have a labile biochemical state in the brain that is reflected in increased cytokine levels following the surgical trauma. Both IL-1Ra and TNF alpha are known to induce fever, malaise, leukocytosis, and nitric oxide synthesis and to mediate ischemic and traumatic brain injuries. The present study shows that levels of these cytokines increase after SAH occurs and that high cytokine levels correlate with brain damage. It is therefore likely that fever, leukocytosis, and nitric oxide synthesis are also mediated by IL-1 in patients suffering from SAH and it is probable that the inflammatory mediators contribute to brain damage.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid interleukin-1 receptor antagonist and tumor necrosis factor-alpha following subarachnoid hemorrhage. 925 84

Intestinal vasculitis is a rare cause of mesenteric ischemia. It results in chronic arterial insufficiency in most cases, sometimes in acute mesenteric ischemia. Abdominal symptoms like postprandial intestinal angina, diarrhea, anorexia, and perforation are nonspecific and do not allow for differentiation between vasculitic and noninflammatory causes of mesenteric ischemia. Conventional radiography and endoscopy can not prove the underlying process either. Therefore, extraintestinal symptoms of vasculitis must be observed carefully for diagnosing a systemic vasculitis with potential involvement of intestinal arteries. Extraintestinal manifestations are multifacetted including malaise, rheumatic symptoms and more specific findings like cutaneous efflorescences and organ-specific vasculitic damages due to ischemia of inner organs, nerves and sensory organs. While some vasculitic disorders are characterized by specific laboratory markers (ANCA, anti-ds-DNA antibodies), others appear with less specific signs. Prior to treatment, the diagnosis should be established by biopsy of suspect tissue and subsequent histologic analysis. Angiography can be helpful in diagnosis of syndromes involving medium-sized or larger vessels. The treatment of choice is glucocorticoids, while in patients with extensive visceral, especially renal involvement, cyclophosphamide should be added. When glucocorticoids can not be tapered or the disease can not be controlled other immunosuppressive agents should be employed. In difficult diagnostics with mere suspicion of vasculitis glucocorticoids may be given ex juvantibus and fairly often prove effective.
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PMID:[Intestinal vasculitis--a diagnostic-therapeutic challenge]. 1072 Nov 76

DEFINITION, PATHOPHYSIOLOGY, THERAPY: The hypertensive crisis is characterized by a massive, acute rise in blood pressure. Patients with underlying hypertensive disease usually have an increase in systolic blood pressure values > 220 mmHg and diastolic values > 120 mmHg. The severity of the condition, however, is not determined by the absolute blood pressure level but by the magnitude of the acute increase in blood pressure. Thus, in the presence of primarily normotensive baseline values (such as those in eclampsia), even a systolic blood pressure > 170 mmHg may lead to a life-threatening condition. The most important causes are non-compliance (reduction or interruption of therapy), inadequate therapy, endocrine disease, renal (vessel) disease, pregnancy and intoxication (drugs). The management of this condition greatly depends on whether the patient has a hypertensive crisis with organ manifestation (hypertensive emergency) or a crisis without organ manifestation (hypertensive urgency). By documenting the medical history, the medical status and by simple diagnostic procedures, the differential diagnosis can be established at the emergency site within a very short period of time. In the absence of organ manifestations (hypertensive urgency) the patient may have non-specific symptoms such as palpitations, headache, malaise and a general feeling of illness in addition to the increase in blood pressure. In a hypertensive urgency the patient's blood pressure should not be reduced within a few minutes but within a period of 24 to 48 hours. Such adjustment can be achieved on an out-patient basis, however, only if the patient can be followed up adequately for early detection of a renewed attack. In the absence of follow-up facilities, the patient's blood pressure should be reduced over a period of 4 to 6 hours, if necessary in an out-patient emergency service. While intravenous medication is given preference when a rapid effect is desired, oral medication may be used for gradual reduction on an out-patient basis, depending on the patient's medical history and on any underlying chronic disease. Organ manifestations in the course of a hypertensive emergency concern the cardiovascular system and are associated with the symptoms of acute left-ventricular heart failure, the acute coronary syndrome or acute aortic dissection. In the brain the patient may have symptoms of hypertensive encephalopathy, hemorrhage, ischemia; in the kidney he/she may develop acute failure. The patient's blood pressure should be reduced rapidly during the treatment. It should not be reduced to the normal value, but by approximately 20-30% of the baseline value. The reason for a stepwise reduction in blood pressure is the fact that patients with chronic hypertension have an altered autoregulation curve. Acute normotension would lead to hypoperfusion in these patients. Those with aortic dissection or pulmonary edema are excepted from the rule of gradual blood pressure reduction. In the presence of these diseases, blood pressure must be reduced rapidly to normal values. Patients with a hypertensive emergency should always be admitted to the hospital. Parenteral treatment is given preference, since the effect of the treatment is rapid and occurs within a calculable period of time. Thus, parenteral treatment can also be better regulated than medication administered orally or by the sublingual route. Several antihypertensives are available for this purpose. The selection of the substance greatly depends on the existing organ failure as well as the reliable effectiveness and the regulability of the applied antihypertensive.
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PMID:[Hypertensive emergency and urgence]. 1468 6

Visceral pain, which originates from organ tissues of the thorax, abdomen or pelvis, is generally perceived as a deep, dull and vague sensation; in most cases it cannot even be clearly described, being a sense of discomfort, malaise or oppression rather than real pain. Crushing, cutting and burning generally have no algogenic effect in the viscera whereas mechanical stimulation, ischemia and chemical stimulation, separately or in combinations, may cause pain. With these characteristics, visceral pain differs from somatic pain. The characteristics of visceral pain, perception and transmission of painful visceral stimuli are explained, some common visceral pain syndromes are presented and sympathetic neurodestructive approaches as a treatment option are described in this review.
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PMID:Visceral pain. 1515 83


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