Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (nausea)
23,468 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seven patients with candidal oesophagitis were treated for up to 8 weeks with an intravenous infusion of miconazole, usually 600 mg given over a period of 30-60 minutes with a frequency depending upon the individual patient. As well as oesophagoscopy, biopsy and culture to establish the clinical course of the disease, a series of immunological investigations were performed, to assess the involvement of the patients' immune mechanisms, together with a whole battery of laboratory investigations to assess their response to the drug. A subjective improvement was observed in all patients after periods varying from 3 to 10 days and objective improvements were observed by oesophagoscopy by 5 of the patients in periods of one to four weeks. The same procedure showed 3 patients to have become completely normal after periods of one to three months. Apart from one instance of nausea, no other side-effects and no abnormal laboratory results were seen. It is suggested that the results of treatment depend on the clinical status of the patient, the associated pathology and the underlying immunological disturbance.
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PMID:Miconazole treatment in candidal oesophagitis. 12 50

Twenty previously untreated patients with small cell carcinoma of the lung were treated with cyclophosphamide, 400 mg/m2 and Adriamycin, 40 mg/m2 IV on day 1, followed by cytosine arabinoside, 20 mg/m2, every 12 hours subcutaneously on days 5--9; this regimen was repeated every 28 days. On days 14--28 of the first cycle, each patient received 3,000 rads to the primary tumor and whole brain. Following eleven courses, Adriamycin was discontinued and patients received cyclophosphamide, 800 mg/m2 IV on day 1 and methotrexate, 15 mg/m2 IV on days 5--7. This regimen was repeated every 28 days. Toxicity included nausea, vomiting, alopecia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, and esophagitis. Overall response rate was 65%. Media survival in limited disease was 14.5 months, and in extended disease it was 4.5 months. This combination is active in localized small cell carcinoma but provides no superiority over other regimens.
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PMID:Combination radiotherapy and chemotherapy for small cell carcinoma of the lung. 23 39

Alkaline gastritis and alkaline esophagitis are now precisely defined syndromes. They occur most often after gastric surgery in which function of the pyloric and lower esophageal sphincter is compromised. Reflux of bile in these patients can then lead to severe inflammation of the gastric and lower esophageal mucosa. Epigastric pain, nausea and bilious vomiting are characteristic symptoms. Gastroscopy with biopsy is, therefore, the definitive diagnostic test; during endoscopy bile is seen in the lower esophagus or stomach, and the mucosa is red, friable and contains acute erosions. Conservative therapy including the administration of cholestyramine has not been helpful. Surgery consisting of diversion of the duodenal contents away from the stomach and lower esophagus is the treatment of choice. The Roux-en-Y procedure has been used most often and has resulted in the amelioration of the symptoms and signs in most patients.
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PMID:Alkaline gastritis and alkaline esophagitis: a review. 32 67

Since 1984, a total of 99 patients underwent vertical banded gastroplasty (VBG) through protocol (pouch 8 ml in size, band 4.3 cm in circumference) to treat morbid obesity. Follow-up was obtained in 95 patients. Thirty upper gastrointestinal endoscopies were performed post-operatively in 17 patients. Indications were nausea/vomiting in 11, epigastric pain in 4, acute obstructive symptoms in 4, and miscellaneous in three. Findings included food impaction in 10, distal esophagitis in 8, gastritis in 4, and a normal examination in 2. Only 4 of 10 food impactions were associated with an excessively narrowed gastroplasty outlet. Eight patients had an excessively narrowed gastric stoma: two became asymptomatic with dietary modification only and six underwent dilation therapy (dilator range from 8 to 18 mm in diameter) with immediate resolution of symptoms in four of six. One of the two patients unresponsive to dilation was lost to follow-up, and the other required surgical revision after multiple dilation sessions.
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PMID:The role of endoscopy after vertical banded gastroplasty. 161 78

Twelve patients with unresectable squamous cell carcinoma of the esophagus were treated with a combination chemotherapy regimen consisting of cis-diamminedichloroplatinum (CDDP), bleomycin (BLM) or peplomycin (PEP), and 5-fluorouracil (5-FU). Ten of them received radiation therapy additionally. CDDP was administered once every 4 weeks at a dose of 50 mg/m2. Methylprednisolone of 250 mg was given intravenously 4 times at the same day with infusion of CDDP. BLM or PEP was administered intravenously at a dose of 20 mg/m2 every 2 weeks and 5-FU was administered at a dose of 330 mg/m2 on days 1-5, 15-19, and afterwards every 4 weeks. All patients received at least two courses of chemotherapy. All of them were evaluable. Complete and partial responses were obtained in one and eight cases, respectively. Responsive rate was 75.0%. The median duration of response was 17.0 weeks. The median duration of survival was 44.0 weeks in all patients, 46.1 weeks in responders and 17.9 weeks in non-responders. Nausea, vomiting, leucopenia, fever, nephrotoxicity and radiation esophagitis were observed as side effects but most of them were mild and well tolerated. In conclusion, this regimen was considered to be very useful as the chemotherapy for primary esophageal carcinoma.
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PMID:[Evaluation of multidisciplinary treatment involving chemotherapy with cis-diamminedichloroplatinum, bleomycin (peplomycin) and 5-fluorouracil for advanced esophageal carcinoma]. 169 21

The unexpected diagnosis of herpetic esophagitis in a patient with nausea led us to review our experience with this disease. Review of our records from 1979 to 1989 produced 23 cases proven by endoscopic culture or microscopic examination (Cowdry-type A inclusions), the largest such series reported to date. Twenty-two of the 23 patients were immunocompromised. Odynophagia and chest pain were each present in half of the cases, but 26% of patients had neither. Gastrointestinal bleeding was attributable to herpetic esophagitis in 30%. Thirty percent of patients had disseminated herpes simplex infection and 70% had simultaneous infections with other organisms. Endoscopic findings included nonspecific inflammation, discrete ulcers, coalescent ulcers, and pseudomembranous esophagitis. Herpes virus was not suspected endoscopically as the cause of esophagitis in 30% of cases. Culture was slightly more sensitive than microscopic examination for diagnosis (89% vs. 76%), but both methods should be employed in any immunocompromised patient with esophagitis.
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PMID:Herpes esophagitis: clinical syndrome, endoscopic appearance, and diagnosis in 23 patients. 132 39

In a dose escalation study, CIS-diamminedichloroplatinum II (cisplatin) was combined with a standard dose of external beam irradiation in 15 patients with localized non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and 16 patients with fixed or recurrent localized adenocarcinoma of the rectum. Cisplatin was given 5 days a week during irradiation using an outpatient portable infusion pump system, at doses of 3.2 mg/m2/24 hr in 15 patients, 4.0 mg/m2/24 hr in 13 patients, and 5.0 mg/m2 24 hr in 3 patients. Twelve of 15 patients with NSCLC received 66 Gy in 33 fractions in 6 1/2 weeks; one received 46 Gy followed by a surgical resection; for the other two patients treatment was discontinued after 50 Gy and 64 Gy, respectively, because they developed distant metastases. The 16 patients with rectal carcinoma received a preoperative dose to the pelvis of 45 Gy in 25 fractions in 5 weeks. Of 12 patients who underwent laparotomy, 10 had a surgical resection, 2 with close or positive surgical margins. Four patients who had resections received an intraoperative electron boost. Of the two patients who did not undergo resection at laparotomy, one received an intraoperative electron boost, the other a boost with interstitial iridium-192. Among the four patients with rectal adenocarcinoma who were not candidates for surgery because of advanced local disease, two had further external beam therapy up to 59.4 Gy, and two had no further therapy. Major toxicity was site-specific, with esophagitis predominating in the patients with NSCLC, diarrhea in the patients with rectal carcinoma, and nausea experienced by both. Cisplatin dose and toxicity seemed to be related. The maximum tolerated dose for low-dose continuous infusion cisplatin given 5 days/week in these patients was 3.2 mg/m2/24 hr combined with 66 Gy in patients with NSCLC and 4.0 mg/m2/24 hr combined with 45 Gy in patients with rectal carcinoma.
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PMID:Low-dose continuous infusion cisplatin combined with external beam irradiation for advanced colorectal adenocarcinoma and unresectable non-small cell lung carcinoma. 165 11

A cas is reported of a 23-year-old man who voluntarily took a massive dose of arsenic (at least 8 g). In spite of the ingested amount and the acute nature of the poisoning, the patient survived 8 days. Gastrointestinal, neurologic and cardiac features were predominant including nausea, vomiting, choleroid diarrhoea, encephalopathy, peripheral neuropathy, and finally a fatal toxic cardiomyopathy. Metabolic acidosis, moderate cytolysis and an anticoagulant effect were also observed. This unique characteristic was partly due to a circulating anticoagulant with prothrombinase activity, as well as direct antivitamin K activity. Postmortem examination revealed: a congestive oesophagitis; a necrosing gastritis involving all the stomach wall; diffuse hepatic steatosis; skin lesions with vascular congestion and dermoepidermal detachment; discrete subepicardial congestive lesions. Arsenic was found in all tissues.
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PMID:[Subacute arsenic poisoning]. 185 59

Sucralfate (Sc) suspension 6 g/day and ranitidine (Rn) tablets, 150 mg, were compared in 125 patients in a double-blind, multicenter, endoscopically controlled trial in the treatment of reflux esophagitis. Inclusion criteria were symptomatic reflux (number and severity of attacks) and endoscopic evidence of esophagitis (grades 1 to 4). Clinical assessments were performed on entry, and at 4 and at 8 weeks, and endoscopy was repeated at 8 weeks. Sc suspension and Rn placebo or Sc placebo and Rn tablets were taken on waking and immediately before retiring at night. Of the 125 patients, 27 were withdrawn because of default (Rn = 4; Sc = 14), noncompliance (Rn = 1; Sc = 2), or the development of congestive cardiac failure (Rn = 1), diarrhea (Rn = 1; Sc = 1), nausea (Sc = 1), constipation (Sc = 1), and hematemesis (Sc = 1). Analysis was performed on the remaining 98 patients, 43 of whom had been treated with Sc and 55 with Rn. Heartburn, acid regurgitation, epigastric pain, dysphagia, and chest pain were relieved in 34% vs 40%, 67% vs 72%, 71% vs 57%, and 86% vs 63% for Sc and Rn, respectively. There was no significant difference between the two groups. Endoscopic healing occurred in 47% of the Sc- and in 31% of the Rn-treated patients (chi 2 = 2.50), and healing or improvement was noted in 81% of the Sc- and 64% of the Rn-treated patients. This difference approached statistical significance (chi 2 = 3.73). There was no obvious endoscopic benefit in 8 of the 43 and 20 of the 55 patients in the groups treated with Sc and Rn, respectively. Although the findings with sucralfate and ranitidine in patients with reflux esophagitis completing the trial suggest a benefit of these agents, the absence of a placebo control group and the high default rates, particularly for those receiving sucralfate, preclude any firm conclusions as to relative or specific efficacy of these agents in this condition.
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PMID:Reflux esophagitis therapy: sucralfate versus ranitidine in a double blind multicenter trial. 188 97

To assess the efficacy and tolerance of fluconazole in the treatment of oesophageal candidiasis, 47 AIDS patients with this infection were enrolled in an open prospective study using fluconazole 100 mg given orally once daily. Clinical cure was obtained in all of 41 evaluable patients, with confirmation of cure in all of 31 patients who underwent post-treatment oesophagoscopy. Forty patients were followed up for at least 30 days; none suffered a relapse of oesophagitis but seven had a recurrence of stomatitis which was effectively treated with fluconazole. Fluconazole was well tolerated. Nausea was noted in three patients one of whom interrupted therapy. Transient mild elevation of ALT/AST was noted in five of 41 patients (12%). Fluconazole appears to be a safe and effective agent for oral therapy of oesophageal candidiasis associated with AIDS.
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PMID:Efficacy of oral fluconazole in the treatment of AIDS associated oesophageal candidiasis. 191 85


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