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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (nausea)
23,468 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The high rate of benzodiazepines (BZD) consumption has been repeatedly confirmed by epidemiological surveys in most major western world countries. In a recent french survey 7% of chronic users of BZD (use in 5/7 days for the last 12 months) were found the general population (17% in the population aged above 65). It has been suggested that the high BZD consumption rate could be related to dependence. The existence of BZD dependence was described in the early sixties with very high dose of chlordiazepoxide but it has become a real concern for the medical community since the late seventies with increasing number of reports of withdrawal symptoms. The extend of the actual rate of withdrawal symptoms at BZD tapering is still very controversial and according to the different studies it varies from 39 to 90%. The between studies difference in parameters such as: the patient populations (psychopathology, treatment duration), the type of tapering employed (duration, nature of the medical and psychological support) and the used operational criteria for withdrawal definition most likely explain this wide variation in the rate of occurrence of withdrawal manifestations. According to the American Psychiatric Association Task Force on Benzodiazepine Dependence, Toxicity and Abuse three type of pathological events can happen after treatment discontinuation: rebound, withdrawal syndrome and recurrence. The rebound consists in the early and transitory reappearance of the anxiety symptoms pre-existing to the treatment but in an exacerbated from; the withdrawal syndrome associates the resurgence of the pre-existing anxiety symptoms and new symptoms as sensory disturbances (metallic taste, hyperosmia, cutaneous exacerbated sensitivity, photophobia...) nausea, headache, motor disturbance in some rare cases depersonalization, paranoid reaction, confusion, convulsion. Rebound or withdrawal syndrome appearance delay varies from hours to few days according mostly to compounds elimination half-life. The relapse develops later with a progressive reapparance of pre-treatment symptoms. In practice recurrence and rebound are often difficult to isolate: recurrence can follow rebound. Different operational criteria of definition for this different entities have been proposed but there is a need for a consensual position. The treatment length, a high daily dose, an alcohol abuse history, a dependent personality and the severity of the psychopathology of the patients have been found to be predictive for the occurrence of withdrawal symptoms. Behavioural therapies (individual or in group) have been proposed with some success for the treatment of benzodiazepine dependence; drug treatment with carbamazepine or imipramine have demonstrated some efficacy. Other drug as buspirone clonidine having anxiolytic properties have not demonstrated efficacy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[Dependence on benzodiazepines. Clinical and biological aspects]. 791 65

Chronic intracranial hypotension is considered as a frequent complication in shunted hydrocephalus, besides obstruction and shunt-infections. In the last twenty years 32 cases of slit-ventricle were diagnosed among the more than one thousand operations on hydrocephalic children at the Paediatric Department of the National Institute of Neurosurgery, Budapest, Hungary. Most of them have been operated on in infancy. Time from the first operation to the development of slit-ventricle ranged from one to twelve years, the mean was 6.5 years. Seven patients were symptomless (22%), while 25 patients (78%) had more or less severe slit-ventricle syndrome with headache (25 cases), nausea/vomiting (23 cases), altered consciousness (21 cases), brainstem signs (12 cases), and epileptic fits (2 cases). Ten patients with moderate clinical signs improved under conservative treatment. In 15 cases an anti-siphon device (ASD) was implanted. In five of them the clinical result was good, but in the remaining 10 cases typical hypertensive signs were seen. In these cases low flow rate valves were implanted instead of the middle flow rate valve and ASD. In one case the intracranial hypertension persisted, so a middle flow rate shunt system was "reimplanted" and finally the patient improved. In this study the experiences with these 32 cases will be analysed and discussed. The authors stress the primary use of combined valves to avoid the slit-ventricle syndrome.
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PMID:Slit-ventricle syndrome in shunt operated children. 794 86

It is known that the antimalarial drug mefloquine may cause neurological side-effects. Only few cases of encephalitis ascribed to mefloquine treatment have been reported. We here describe a 34 year-old female patient with symptoms of acute brain syndrome. The patient was initially treated with mefloquine for infection with P. falciparum. She was rehospitalized 12 days after mefloquine treatment with fever, nausea, dizziness and headache. Her condition worsened and her temperature rose and 15 days after treatment she had generalized convulsions and went into a coma. The EEG was severely abnormal. The patient was discharged 37 days after mefloquine treatment, but it was two months before the EEG was normal and the patient in her usual condition.
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PMID:[Acute brain syndrome after mefloquine treatment]. 799 50

At the Bangkok Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Thailand, health workers collected blood samples from male patients with acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria so researchers could compare the efficacy of artesunate (700 mg over 5 days) with the standard antimalarial treatment (600 mg quinine at 8 hour intervals plus 250 mg tetracycline at 6 hour intervals for 7 days). All 31 patients in the artesunate group had a much more rapid initial response than the 33 in the quinine-tetracycline group (mean parasite clearance time [PCT] = 37 hours; mean fever clearance time [FCT] = 31 vs. 73 and 55 hours, respectively) (p = 0.000001 for PCT; p = 0.000041 for FCT). In both groups, the mean PCT and mean FCT did not differ with level of pretreatment parasitemia. The cure rates on day 28 did not differ significantly (96.7% for the artesunate group, 100% for the quinine-tetracycline group). Five men in the artesunate group and nine in the quinine-tetracycline group had Plasmodium vivax in the peripheral blood between days 13 and 24, suggesting that these two regimens are not effective during the intrahepatic stage of plasmodia. 29 patients in the quinine-tetracycline group had tinnitus, while no one in the artesunate group did (p = 0.000001). Nausea and dizziness were common in both groups (45% for the artesunate group and 60% for the quinine-tetracycline group; 52% and 48%, respectively). Vomiting was more common in the quinine-tetracycline group (91% vs. 26%; p = 0.000005). Seven patients in the artesunate group had bradycardia, mostly during days 2-7. Convulsions occurred in one patient in the artesunate group 21 days after the first dose. They may have been caused by malaria, but artemisinin compounds have had central nervous system effects. These findings suggest that 700 mg artesunate is an effective antimalarial in areas with multiple-drug resistant parasites. Health workers should monitor its side effects, especially neurotoxicity, closely.
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PMID:Comparison of oral artesunate and quinine plus tetracycline in acute uncomplicated falciparum malaria. 820 43

We report on the toxicity, intrathecal pharmacokinetics, and therapeutic effect of the ventriculolumbar perfusion of 3-[(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl]-1-(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitros our ea hydrochloride (ACNU) against the subarachnoid dissemination of primary central nervous system tumors. Fifteen patients received ventriculolumbar perfusion of ACNU. One was treated with ventriculolumbar perfusion of ACNU alone, and the others underwent concomitant systemic chemotherapy; three of these patients received irradiation as well. ACNU was administered at an initial dose of 0.5 and was increased to 1.5 to 10.0 mg in six patients. Because of a lack of Level 2 or greater toxicity, the subsequent seven patients received 8.7 to 10.0 mg of ACNU dissolved in artificial cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) at a concentration of 0.1 mg/ml, from the start of the treatment. During ACNU administration, the lumbar CSF was drained at approximately the same rate as that of the infusion. Twelve patients received from 3 to 42 courses (average, 14 courses). The cumulative dose of ACNU ranged from 5 to 330.4 mg (average, 82.9 mg). One patient had a convulsion; two patients experienced transient headache, nausea, and vomiting; two others reported transient headache, nausea, vomiting, and fecal incontinence; and one experienced transient nausea, vomiting, and fecal incontinence. No side effects were noted in the other nine patients. When 9.0 to 9.5 mg of ACNU, dissolved in 90 to 95 ml of artificial CSF, was administered for 37 to 52 min, the maximum concentration of ACNU in the lumbar CSF was 9.86 to 12.79 micrograms/ml and the area under the drug concentration-time curve was 260.8 to 502.5 micrograms.min/ml.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Ventriculolumbar perfusion of 3-[(4-amino-2-methyl-5-pyrimidinyl)methyl]-1-(2-chloroethyl)-1-nitrosou rea hydrochloride. 826 78

A neuropsychiatric and -psychological update of the crime "profile" and "signature" is a necessary addition to the traditional sociopsychological model likely to miss limbic system dysfunctioning. Thus, occurrence of a brief (c. 20 minutes) limbic seizure has been proposed based on behaviors of 12 white male homicidal loners, who showed a dozen symptoms and signs: Limbic Psychotic Trigger Reaction. Readily overlooked can be (a) a transient psychosis (hallucinations and/or delusions), (b) autonomic hyperactivation (e.g., loss of bladder control, nausea, ejaculation), (c) motiveless, out-of-character, unplanned, and well-remembered homicidal acts, (d) committed with a flat affect (not emotionally or impulsively provoked), (e) typically involving a stranger who happened to provide an objectively harmless and only subjectively important stimulus. (f) Such an individualized stimulus triggered the memory revival of mild to moderate but repeatedly experienced hurts. Such a specific sequence of events implicates the specific mechanism of limbic seizure, "kindling," which does not necessarily involve motor convulsions. Repetition of such limbic episodes with "criminal acts" is conceivable under specific circumstances including cases in which the triggering stimulus is associated with pleasurable delusions (e.g., of grandiose power or wealth) or constitutes a specific aspect of a basic drive motive. For example, eating or sexual activities might be planned but degenerate into a limbic episode with a specific core symptomatology.
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PMID:Neuropsychiatric update of the crime "profile" and "signature" in single or serial homicides: rule out limbic psychotic trigger reaction. 830 91

Exercise-induced hyponatremia is commonly believed to be associated only with extraordinary physical efforts, or particularly strenuous exercise. Hyponatremia complicating moderate exercise has not been described previously. The authors describe the characteristics of seven patients with life-threatening hyponatremia associated with mild to moderate exercise. All patients suffered from nausea, vomiting, agitation, and confusion, appearing during or after moderate physical activity. Grand mal convulsions occurred in five of the patients. In laboratory results, hyponatremia was as low as 115 mEq/L, with a relatively high sodium concentration in the urine. High serum creatine kinase activity levels were found in most of the patients. All patients were discharged in good condition, without neurologic sequela. The authors conclude that hyponatremia is a possible complication of moderate exercise, and not only of endurance sports, and that exercise-induced hyponatremia can produce severe neurologic manifestations. The mechanism of the hyponatremia is unclear, but may be due to a hemodynamically inappropriate stimulus for antidiuretic hormone secretion.
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PMID:Case series: hyponatremia associated with moderate exercise. 861 81

There have been over 300 cases of methyl bromide poisoning reported in the literature. The first objective of this case report was to bring out an experience with the false belief that work in a closed space is safe when accompanied by the use of a cartridge respirator with activated charcoal. The second objective of this article was to demonstrate the marked toxicity of methyl bromide with the potential to cause long-term neurological damage. Two experienced fumigation workers (equipped with rapidly saturable respiratory cartridges) entered a building where the concentration of methyl bromide was 17g x m-3 instead of the advised 20mg x m-3. They felt rapidly unwell and complained of nausea and shortness of breath, followed for one them by generalized convulsions. Five months later this last man was still bedridden. The other worker had almost no after-effects. The highest bromide level was found in the blood and also in the activated charcoal cartridge of the most injured worker. There was a relationship between methyl bromide level exposure and neurological damage importance.
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PMID:Methyl bromide intoxication during grain store fumigation. 867 4

1. The safety in everyday clinical usage of three 4-quinolone antibiotics, (ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin and ofloxacin), was compared with similar data for azithromycin and cefixime, each agent being examined by Prescription-Event Monitoring (PEM) during the early post-marketing period. 2. In PEM the exposure data are derived from general practitioner prescriptions confidentially provided by the Prescription Pricing Authority. Outcome data are provided by questionnaires (green forms) on which the prescribing medical practitioner records event data. When necessary, further information is obtained from a number of sources which include follow-up of all pregnancies and the patients' life-time medical record. 3. The main outcome measures were demographic information, including the patient's date of birth and sex; the indication for prescribing the drug being monitored; the reason for stopping treatment; the start and stop dates of treatment and the events recorded during and after treatment. 4. The final cohort for each of the five antibiotics exceeded 11000 patients. The only event significantly related to the use of all five antibiotics was nausea/vomiting. This was also the most frequent adverse event causing treatment to be discontinued with norfloxacin, ofloxacin and azithromycin (relevant information was not requested in the studies of ciprofloxacin and cefixime). Vaginal candidiasis was significantly more frequently associated with the use of the three 4-quinolones than with azithromycin and cefixime but it was frequently delayed until the week or two after the cessation of therapy. Within each event, as recorded in these studies, the highest event rates (the number of events per 1000 patients) in the week following the start of therapy were: 9.2 for diarrhoea with cefixime; 4.9 for nausea/vomiting with ofloxacin; 2.4 for rash with azithromycin; 2.2 for abdominal pain with norfloxacin; 1.5 for headache/migraine with ofloxacin; 1.4 for malaise/lassitude with ofloxacin; 1.2 for dizziness with norfloxacin. Uncommon events (reported in less than 1:1000 patients) included rare cases of allergic phenomena, convulsions and pseudomembranous colitis. There were no reports of tendinitis, tenosynovitis or tendon rupture in children but tendon disorders were reported in the two months following the start of treatment in 20 adults. A total of 307 pregnancies were reported. Thirty-eight of the 55 women who received these drugs during the first trimester of pregnancy gave birth to healthy babies. No congenital abnormalities were reported. Apart from one case of unconfirmed pseudomembranous colitis, none of the other 2468 deaths that occurred in these studies was attributed to the antibiotics. 5. These five antibiotics are acceptably safe antimicrobial agents when used in general medical practice. PEM is an effective method for monitoring the safety of recently introduced antimicrobial agents.
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PMID:A comparison of ciprofloxacin, norfloxacin, ofloxacin, azithromycin and cefixime examined by observational cohort studies. 873 Sep 72

Since citalopram was first approved in 1989, it has been prescribed to an estimated > 600 000 patients. An integrated safety database has been prepared, including data from 3107 patients from 24 clinical trials. In placebo-controlled trials, nausea, dry mouth, somnolence, increased sweating, tremor, diarrhoea, and ejaculation failure, mostly of mild to moderate severity, occurred significantly (p < 0.05) more frequently with citalopram. The excess incidence of these events over placebo was always less than 10%. In pooled comparative studies, citalopram's tolerability profile was similar to that of other selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and superior to that of tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs). Spontaneous adverse event reports arising from clinical use have confirmed the safety profile defined during the trials programme. Specific monitoring of all serious adverse events from around 10 000 patients receiving citalopram in clinical trials (including small open studies) has indicated a low potential for convulsions and extrapyramidal effects. There is no evidence of withdrawal phenomena on abrupt discontinuation, no clinically relevant effects on cardiac or laboratory parameters, and little or no effect on psychomotor function. When taken in overdose alone, citalopram appears to have a relatively wide margin of safety. Citalopram has been well tolerated in both short- and long-term use, and the profile seen in trials has been confirmed in the clinic.
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PMID:The safety and tolerability of citalopram. 873 43


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