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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A randomized double-blind trial was conducted to assess the local effectiveness and safety of a troche form of clotrimazole in the treatment of oropharyngeal
candidiasis
in cancer patients. One half of the patients received one 10-mg troche and the other half received one 50-mg troche, five times a day for two weeks. Clinical cures were observed in 50 episodes, resulting in a cure rate of 96%. The median duration of oropharyngeal
candidiasis
after the start of therapy was three days in those treated with the 50-mg troche and four days in those who had received the 10-mg troche. Side effects were minimal, and only one patient experienced
nausea
and abdominal pain. Both the 10-mg and 50-mg troches appear to be efficacious and safe, but the 50-mg dose may be preferable because it is somewhat more effective without additional toxicity.
...
PMID:Oropharyngeal candidiasis treated with a troche form of clotrimazole. 37 58
Miconazole, a new imidazole antimycotic agent, was given intravenously to five children with chronic mucocutaneous
candidiasis
over an 18-month period. There was marked improvement of mucosa and skin in two patients, moderate-to-milk improvement in two, and no improvement in one. Nail lesions were not improved in any patient. Adverse reactions included phlebitis, pruritus,
nausea
and dizziness, rash, wheezing, mild transient anemia, and mild transient transaminase (SGOT and SGPT) elevations; it was necessary to discontinue treatment in only one patient. No renal toxocity was noted. Miconazole appears to be a relatively safe and promising alternative to amphotericin B in chronic mucocutaneous
candidiasis
.
...
PMID:Miconazole in the treatment of chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis: a preliminary report. 90 25
Treatment with flucytosine of 20 patients with fungal infections gave favorable results in four patients with crytococcal infections, two of four patients with disseminated
candidiasis
, eight of ten patients with urinary tract infections due to Candida albicans and Torulopsis glabrata, and tow of three patients with miscellaneous infections due to Calbicans. Two patients with crytococcal meningitis and altered host resistance and one patient with an aorto femoral graft infection due to C albicans were treated with flucytosine and smphotericin B. The infection was eradicated in one of the patients with meningitis, and cultures from an infected arterial graft became negative. Adverse side effects of flucytosine included mild leukopenia and thrombocytopenia, a transient increase in alkaline phosphatase and glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, and
nausea
and diarrhea.
...
PMID:Treatment of fungal infections with flucytosine. 109 40
To determine the efficacy and toxicity of two systemically active antifungal agents in the treatment of buccal and oesophageal candidiasis 111 HIV-infected patients with microscopically-confirmed
candidiasis
were randomized to receive either 200 mg itraconazole once a day or 200 mg ketoconazole twice a day for 28 days in a double blind study. After 1 week of treatment, 75 and 82% of the patients on itraconazole and ketoconazole, respectively, had responded clinically. After 4 weeks of treatment, this had risen to 93% in each group. One patient discontinued itraconozole because of toxicity (rash), five patients discontinued ketaconazole (two
nausea
, two hepatotoxicity and one rash). Despite successful clinical and mycological clearance, 80% patients had a further episode of candidosis within the next 3 months.
...
PMID:Itraconazole versus ketaconazole in the treatment of oral and oesophageal candidosis in patients infected with HIV. 166 59
50 HIV-positive patients (CDC stage III to VI) with oral candidiasis proven by culture and typical clinical findings were treated with fluconazole (50 to 100 mg/day) over a period of eight to 22 days. After completion of treatment, clinical signs of oral candidiasis had disappeared in 45/50 patients. In 10/50 patients, however, increased concentrations of candida both in pharyngeal washes (greater than 10(2) PFU/ml) and throat swabs (greater than 20 colonies/culture) persisted. Four weeks later, clinical
candidiasis
had reappeared in 22/42 patients and another 14/42 patients without clinical symptoms had pathological concentrations of candida in culture. In no case did treatment with fluconazole itself have to be aborted because of adverse reactions. Most of the patients had multiple concomitant bacterial and/or viral infections requiring comprehensive medication. The side effects observed (
nausea
, headache, changes in the blood picture, etc.) were due to the concomitant infections and their specific therapy.
...
PMID:[Fluconazole in therapy of candidiasis of the oropharyngeal space in patients with HIV infection. Results of an open multicenter study of assessing the effectiveness and tolerance of fluconazole]. 175 72
Fluconazole is a new oral triazole antifungal with good activity against Candida spp. In this study, we investigated the effectiveness and tolerability of a three-day course of treatment with fluconazole compared with clotrimazole vaginal tablets in nonpregnant women with acute Candida vaginitis. Of the 90 evaluable patients who received fluconazole, 76 (84 percent) were asymptomatic seven to ten days after treatment compared with 84 of 95 (88 percent) treated with clotrimazole. An additional ten patients in the fluconazole group (11 percent) and seven in the clotrimazole group (7 percent) had improvement in their signs and symptoms. Only four patients in each group (4 percent) were considered treatment failures. Mycological cures were obtained in 89 and 93 percent of patients treated with fluconazole and clotrimazole, respectively, seven to ten days posttreatment. Clinical cure rates remained high one month posttreatment: 79 percent in the fluconazole group and 83 percent in the clotrimazole group. Both therapies were well tolerated. One patient discontinued treatment after she developed diarrhea while receiving fluconazole. The most common adverse effects associated with fluconazole use were
nausea
(six percent) and diarrhea (three percent). No clinically significant laboratory abnormalities were observed. In this investigation, oral fluconazole therapy was found to be as safe and effective as clotrimazole vaginal tablets in women with acute vulvovaginal
candidiasis
.
...
PMID:Comparative study of fluconazole and clotrimazole in the treatment of vulvovaginal candidiasis. 187 64
A 34-year-old male was admitted to our hospital because of anorexia and
nausea
in September, 1987. On admission, anemia, thrombocytopenia and hypercalcemia were observed, and the peripheral blood showed leukocytosis with atypical plasma cells (50%). Bone marrow aspiration showed hypercellularity, with a presence of atypical plasma cells (82%). The M-type protein in the serum and urine was identified as lambda Bence Jones protein by immunoelectrophoresis. On systemic skeletal X-rays, osteolytic lesions were not detected. Thus, a diagnosis of plasma cell leukemia associated with hypercalcemia was made. Hypercalcemia was treated successfully with overhydration. However the disease was refractory to combination chemotherapy, and at 10 months after diagnosis, he died of septic
candidiasis
. Hypercalcemia associated with plasma cell leukemia in its initial stage is rare.
...
PMID:[Primary plasma cell leukemia associated with hypercalcemia]. 194 29
During a period of 32 months (August 1986 until April 1989) 108 patients (74 women, 34 men; mean age 53 years) with neoplastic diseases (59 patients with solid tumors, 45 patients with lymphomas, two patients with acute leukaemias, one patient with chronic myelogenous leukaemia, one patient with aplastic anaemia) were studied in the Department of Internal Medicine of the University Erlangen-Nuremberg. Most were treated with a cytostatic chemotherapy. In order to prevent a mycotic infection in these immunocompromised patients, itraconazole, a new broad-spectrum antimycotic drug of the azole group, was given in an oral dosage of 100 mg day-1 (mean duration of prophylactic treatment 24 months). Localized
Candida infections
involving the oropharynx and the female genital organs were diagnosed in 16 patients (14.8%). Candida endophthalmitis occurred in one patient (0.9%). The serum concentration of Candida antibodies was significantly elevated in one patient (0.9%) without evidence of fungemia. Itraconazole had to be discontinued in four cases (3.7%) due to minor side effects of the drug (
nausea
, stomach complaints). Itraconazole appears to be a safe and effective antimycotic drug in long-term use in neutropenic patients.
...
PMID:Prophylaxis of fungal infections with itraconazole in immunocompromised cancer patients. 217 92
Fluconazole is a novel antifungal agent, available in oral and intravenous forms, which was developed by Pfizer Central Research. It is characterized by its long serum half-life (approximately 30 hours) to allow once-a-day dosing and favorable safety profile. Fluconazole was administered orally or intravenously to 166 patients with deep-seated mycosis and it was possible to evaluate clinical efficacies in 99 patients. Clinical cures were obtained in 41 (87.2%) out of 47 cases of
candidiasis
, in 10 (66.7%) out of 15 cases of cryptococcosis, in 17 (48.6%) out of 35 cases of aspergillosis and in 1 case each (100%) of mucormycosis and mycosis due to an unspecified yeast. Side effects were observed in 10 cases (rash 2, fever 2, abdominal discomfort 1,
nausea
1, edema 1, edema/pleural effusion/oliguria 1, finger stiffness 1, hiccup 1) with incidence rate of 6.0%. Drug administrations were discontinued in 4 cases. In general, however, fluconazole was well tolerated. Abnormal changes in laboratory test values due to the drug were observed in 32 cases and incidence rate was 19.3%. These were, however, slight and temporary changes and most of them were in parameters of liver function. It is not clear if these changes were related to the fluconazole administration, because other drugs were concomitantly administered to these cases. These results indicate that fluconazole is an agent with very good potential for the treatment of the systemic deep-seated mycoses.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of fluconazole on deep-seated fungal infections]. 254 Mar 69
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.
...
PMID:Metabolic effects of low-dose fluconazole in healthy female users and non-users of oral contraceptives. 254 10
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