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)

Seventy-four post-menopausal women with metastatic breast cancer were treated with a combination hormonal regimen consisting of tamoxifen, aminoglutethimide danazol and medroxyprogesterone acetate (POND). 72% of the patients had received no previous treatment. The overall response rate (complete and partial remission) was 43.5% with a median response duration of 19 months and a median survival of 27 months. The most common sites of response were in regional nodes and local chest wall disease. The major side-effects were those expected from the individual agents: nausea, lethargy, rash and oedema.
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PMID:Combination of tamoxifen, aminoglutethimide, danazol and medroxyprogesterone acetate in advanced breast cancer. 214 4

In 1988-1989 two outbreaks of trichinosis were recorded. The first case was group disease developed in 3 members of the family. The source of infection was rissoles rolled in cabbage leaves [correction of goloubets] stuffed with minced pork. The second outbreak affected 13 persons who had eaten home-made pork sausage and fat. All the patients displayed fever, weakness, muscular pain, subcutaneous fat edema, predominantly of the face. The patients suffered from dry mouth, thirst, deteriorated appetite, exanthema, eosinophilia, more occasionally, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and diarrhea. Trichinosis was confirmed serologically. Vermox therapy (300 mg per day) was performed for 7 to 12 days. The disease was severe, moderate and mild in 5, 7 and 4 patients, respectively. A brief abstract from a case record of a patient with severe trichinosis complicated by allergic myocarditis is presented. The severity of the disease was associated with the infecting dose and the time at which etiotropic therapy was started. Vermox had a good therapeutic effect and caused no adverse events.
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PMID:[The clinical characteristics of 2 outbreaks of trichinelliasis]. 214 73

In patients with locally advanced (bulky) carcinoma of the prostate, definitive radiotherapy is associated with a high rate of local recurrence. The Radiation Therapy Oncology Group (RTOG) has conducted several studies evaluating hormonal cytoreduction (used as an induction regimen) as a means of improving the local control rate. RTOG 85-19 tested an induction regimen consisting of a depot LH-RH agonist (Zoladex) and an antiandrogen (flutamide). Eligible patients were those with bulky primary lesions (stage B2 and C) with disease confined to the pelvis. Zoladex was administered every 29 days via a subcutaneous injection. Flutamide was given by mouth in a dose of 250 mg t.i.d. Administration of the drugs was initiated 2 months prior to start of radiotherapy and was terminated at completion of the radiotherapy course. Radiotherapy consisted of 180-200 rad/day, 4,400-4,500 rad to the regional lymphatics, and 6,500-7,000 rad to the prostate. The primary aim of the study was to evaluate the effectiveness and toxicity of the combined (hormonal cytoreduction plus definitive radiotherapy) regimen. Thirty-one patients were accessioned; 30 are analyzable. The drug-related toxicity appears acceptable. It included appearance of diarrhea before initiation of radiotherapy in two patients, nausea during the 2nd week of drug administration in two patients, and skin rash in three patients. These phenomena appear to be related to flutamide. Hot flashes were recorded in 17 patients. With a minimum follow-up of 2 years, clearance of the primary lesions (by clinical examination) was documented in 28 of 30 patients. During the 1st year, two of 30 patients died (of unrelated causes) with residual palpable tumors. The observed toxicity appears acceptable and the response rate encouraging. A phase III study comparing the tested regimen against radiotherapy alone appears warranted.
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PMID:Phase II Radiation Therapy Oncology Group study of hormonal cytoreduction with flutamide and Zoladex in locally advanced carcinoma of the prostate treated with definitive radiotherapy. 214 72

In general, ciprofloxacin is well tolerated. The most common adverse effects are nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness, nervousness, and rash. Reversible leukopenia can be associated with the use of oral ciprofloxacin, as shown by our case. Leukopenia should be watched for as the use of this drug increases.
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PMID:Reversible leukopenia related to ciprofloxacin therapy. 217 51

In a randomized, double blind, placebo-controlled study 36 patients aged 16-77 years who had been carriers of nontyphi Salmonella species for 10-21 weeks were given the combination pivampicillin/pivmecillinam or placebo for four weeks in order to eradicate the carrier state. 34/36 patients who fulfilled the criteria for inclusion in the study were evaluable for efficacy, 16 in the pivampicillin/pivmecillinam group and 18 in the placebo group. Seven patients in the pivampicillin/pivmecillinam group had to terminate the treatment after 10-25 days because of adverse reactions, mainly exanthema and nausea. After therapy 8/16 patients treated with pivampicillin/pivmecillinam and 4/18 patients treated with placebo had negative stool cultures for Salmonella species during a mean follow-up time of 13 and 20 weeks, respectively. No abnormalities could be found in those patients who did not respond to therapy except for earlier cholecystectomy in two patients, both in the pivampicillin/pivmecillinam group.
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PMID:Efficacy of the combination pivampicillin/pivmecillinam compared to placebo in the treatment of convalescent carriers of nontyphi Salmonella. 219 71

We reported a case of disulfiram-induced hepatitis with unique clinical features and compared our case with others in the literature. Our patient had headache, mild fever, nausea, vomiting, rash, and eosinophilia after 3 weeks of disulfiram therapy. Subsequent liver biopsy showed low-grade lobular hepatitis. After disulfiram therapy was discontinued, symptoms subsided and results of liver function tests returned to normal.
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PMID:Disulfiram-induced hepatitis. 219 96

Autologous lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells and recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL-2) were administered intraperitoneally (IP) to 24 patients with malignancies limited to the peritoneal space. Ten patients had ovarian cancer, 12 had colorectal cancer, and one patient each had endometrial carcinoma and primary small-bowel adenocarcinoma. All ovarian cancer patients, three of twelve colorectal cancer patients, and one patient with endometrial carcinoma had received prior therapy. Patients received IL-2 100,000 U/kg every 8 hours intravenously (IV) for 3 days, and 2 days later underwent daily leukapheresis for 5 days. LAK cells were generated in vitro by incubating the peripheral blood mononuclear cells in IL-2 for 7 days and were then administered IP daily for 5 days through a Tenckhoff catheter (Davol, Inc, Cranston, RI) together with IL-2 25,000 U/kg IP every 8 hours. All but one patient completed at least one cycle of therapy. Toxic side effects included minor to moderate hypotension, fever, chills, rash, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain and distension, diarrhea, oliguria, fluid retention, thrombocytopenia, and minor elevations of liver function tests; all of these rapidly improved after discontinuation of IL-2. One patient had a grand mal seizure, and one suffered a colonic perforation; these were felt to be treatment-related. IP fibrosis developed in 14 patients and limited repeated cyclic administration of this therapy in five patients. Two of 10 (20%) ovarian cancer patients and five of 12 (42%) colorectal cancer patients had laparoscopy- or laparotomy-documented partial responses. We conclude that LAK cells and rIL-2 can be administered IP to cancer patients, resulting in moderate to severe short-term toxicity and modest therapeutic efficacy. Further investigation of this form of adoptive immunotherapy modified to address the problem of IP fibrosis and with lower IP IL-2 doses is justified by these initial results.
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PMID:Intraperitoneal lymphokine-activated killer-cell and interleukin-2 therapy for malignancies limited to the peritoneal cavity. 221 99

In an open study, 70 in-patients and 23 out-patients aged between 1 and 14 years with sinusitis (n = 1), perforated otitis media (n = 4), pharyngotonsillitis (n = 25), tracheobronchitis (n = 30) or broncho-pneumonia (n = 33) were treated daily with a combination of 40 mg/kg amoxycillin and 10 mg/kg clavulanic acid in three equal doses for between 6 and 15 days. Purulent specimens were cultured when obtainable and pathogenic organisms identified were Staphylococcus aureus, beta-haemolytic streptococcal group A, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Pseudococcus species and Klebsiella pneumoniae infections, of which 45.7% were beta-lactamase-producing and 54.3% were ampicillin-susceptible. After treatment, only one beta-lactamase-producing Streptococcus and one Staphylococcus infection persisted. Side-effects (vomiting, nausea, diarrhoea, maculopapular exanthema, rash) occurred in 16 patients and treatment was withdrawn in eight. It is concluded that the amoxycillin--clavulanic acid combination is a suitable first choice for the treatment of respiratory tract infections in children in whom the pathogenic organism may not have been established.
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PMID:Treatment of respiratory tract infections in children: a study of a combination of amoxycillin and clavulanic acid. 222 80

We conducted an open randomized trial to compare the efficacy of parenteral and oral ofloxacin with that of amoxycillin/clavulanate. A total of 121 patients was studied; 92 were clinically evaluable. Of these, 59 patients were treated with ofloxacin and 33 with the comparator drug. Patients were given the drugs intravenously for a minimum of three days followed by oral preparations for the next seven to ten days. Ofloxacin was usually administered as a 200 mg dose bd. In the ofloxacin treated group all patients showed clinical improvement. In the comparator group 94% improved clinically (either a complete or partial response), while 6% were clinical failures. Of the bacteriologically evaluable patients 19 of 20 showed a satisfactory bacteriological response in the ofloxacin treated group, while in the comparator group the bacteriological response was judged satisfactory in 14 of 17 patients. A small proportion of patients (7%) treated with ofloxacin suffered mild adverse effects (nausea, vomiting, headache, hypotension and rash). On the whole, ofloxacin was well tolerated by our patients. The two deaths that occurred were in the comparator group. We conclude that ofloxacin in both oral and parenteral forms is an effective and safe drug in the treatment of lower respiratory tract infections.
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PMID:A comparative study of ofloxacin and amoxycillin/clavulanate in hospitalized patients with lower respiratory tract infections. 228 96

We have evaluated the use of high-dose intravenous ciprofloxacin as monotherapy in the empirical therapy of febrile episodes in neutropenic patients during the course of a randomized trial comparing ciprofloxacin with a standard combination regimen. Sixty-four episodes of fever were studied in a high risk population of 42 patients mostly undergoing intensive chemotherapy for leukaemia. Ciprofloxacin achieved clinical responses as follows: completely successful in 39%, partially successful in 20%, and unsuccessful in 41%. Infections were microbiologically documented in 37 (58%), with Gram-positive bacteria (of which 37% were coagulase negative staphylococci and 34% were streptococci) accounting for 81% of all organisms cultured. Responses in documented infections were as follows; completely successful in 32%, partially successful in 27%, and unsuccessful in 41%. One infection-related death occurred 30 h after starting ciprofloxacin, and a further three patients died before the resolution of neutropenia. The early death was caused by fulminant infection with a ciprofloxacin-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. No other ciprofloxacin resistance was seen amongst eight Gram-negative isolates. There was no evidence of emerging ciprofloxacin resistance during the course of the study. Ciprofloxacin was associated with a low incidence of adverse events with skin rash (five cases) and nausea (one case) being reported as possibly or probably related to ciprofloxacin. We conclude that high-dose intravenous ciprofloxacin may be safely employed as monotherapy in the empirical treatment of febrile episodes in neutropenic patients. It has the additional advantages of twice daily administration, the availability of intravenous and oral presentations, and absence of cross-allergy in beta-lactam antibiotic hypersensitive patients.
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PMID:High dose intravenous ciprofloxacin in febrile neutropenic patients. 229 37


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