Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Methotrexate has a long history of use in the treatment of various immunologic diseases, including rheumatoid arthritis and psoriasis. Although the drug is usually prescribed by a subspecialist, a family physician may assume responsibility for monitoring methotrexate therapy. Major toxic effects, such as hepatic, pulmonary, renal and bone marrow abnormalities, require careful monitoring. Minor toxic effects, such as stomatitis, malaise, nausea, diarrhea, headaches and mild alopecia, are common but respond to folate supplementation. Methotrexate is administered once weekly as a single dose or in divided doses given over a 24-hour period. To reduce the incidence of major toxic effects, methotrexate should never be given in daily doses. Relative contraindications include renal dysfunction, liver disease, active infectious disease and excessive alcohol consumption. Both women and men of reproductive age should use birth control during methotrexate therapy. Potential drug interactions include salicylates and nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, which are both commonly used in patients with rheumatoid arthritis or psoriasis. A premethotrexate evaluation is important to ensure proper patient selection for this effective but potentially toxic drug.
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PMID:A family physician's guide to monitoring methotrexate. 1103 77

The cachexia-anorexia syndrome occurs in chronic pathophysiologic processes including cancer, infection with human immunodeficiency virus, bacterial and parasitic diseases, inflammatory bowel disease, liver disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, cardiovascular disease, and rheumatoid arthritis. Cachexia makes an organism susceptible to secondary pathologies and can result in death. Cachexia-anorexia may result from pain, depression or anxiety, hypogeusia and hyposmia, taste and food aversions, chronic nausea, vomiting, early satiety, malfunction of the gastrointestinal system (delayed digestion, malabsorption, gastric stasis and associated delayed emptying, and/or atrophic changes of the mucosa), metabolic shifts, cytokine action, production of substances by tumor cells, and/or iatrogenic causes such as chemotherapy and radiotherapy. The cachexia-anorexia syndrome also involves metabolic and immune changes (mediated by either the pathophysiologic process, i.e., tumor, or host-derived chemical factors, e.g., peptides, neurotransmitters, cytokines, and lipid-mobilizing factors) and is associated with hypertriacylglycerolemia, lipolysis, and acceleration of protein turnover. These changes result in the loss of fat mass and body protein. Increased resting energy expenditure in weight-losing cachectic patients can occur despite the reduced dietary intake, indicating a systemic dysregulation of host metabolism. During cachexia, the organism is maintained in a constant negative energy balance. This can rarely be explained by the actual energy and substrate demands by tumors in patients with cancer. Overall, the cachectic profile is significantly different than that observed during starvation. Cachexia may result not only from anorexia and a decreased caloric intake but also from malabsorption and losses from the body (ulcers, hemorrhage, effusions). In any case, the major deficit of a cachectic organism is a negative energy balance. Cytokines are proposed to participate in the development and/or progression of cachexia-anorexia; interleukin-1, interleukin-6 (and its subfamily members such as ciliary neurotrophic factor and leukemia inhibitory factor), interferon-gamma, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and brain-derived neurotrophic factor have been associated with various cachectic conditions. Controversy has focused on the requirement of increased cytokine concentrations in the circulation or other body fluids (e.g., cerebrospinal fluid) to demonstrate cytokine involvement in cachexia-anorexia. Cytokines, however, also act in paracrine, autocrine, and intracrine manners, activities that cannot be detected in the circulation. In fact, paracrine interactions represent a predominant cytokine mode of action within organs, including the brain. Data show that cytokines may be involved in cachectic-anorectic processes by being produced and by acting locally in specific brain regions. Brain synthesis of cytokines has been shown in peripheral models of cancer, peripheral inflammation, and during peripheral cytokine administration; these data support a role for brain cytokines as mediators of neurologic and neuropsychiatric manifestations of disease and in the brain-to-peripheral communication (e.g., through the autonomic nervous system). Brain mechanisms that merit significant attention in the cachexia-anorexia syndrome are those that result from interactions among cytokines, peptides/neuropeptides, and neurotransmitters. These interactions could result in additive, synergistic, or antagonistic activities and can involve modifications of transducing molecules and intracellular mediators. Thus, the data show that the cachexia-anorexia syndrome is multifactorial, and understanding the interactions between peripheral and brain mechanisms is pivotal to characterizing the underlying integrative pathophysiology of this disorder.
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PMID:Central nervous system mechanisms contributing to the cachexia-anorexia syndrome. 1105 8

Lactic acidosis and hepatic steatosis caused by mitochondrial toxicity of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) is a rare cause of liver disease with a high mortality rate. This report describes a male, HIV-positive patient with a 4-week history of nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. His medication consisted of prednisone 5 mg od (because of auto-immune thrombocytopenia), didanosine (for 2 years) and stavudine (for 3 months). Laboratory studies showed cholestasis and elevation of aminotransferases. Lactic level was not measured. Liver biopsy revealed steatosis and cholestatic hepatitis. In the absence of other causes of liver disease a probable diagnosis of stavudine-induced hepatic toxicity was made. After discontinuation of NRTI, he recovered completely. Because lactic acidosis had not been confirmed, stavudine was restarted and within 1 week the lactate level increased significantly. Therefore stavudine was discontinued again. One year later the patient is doing well on a double protease inhibitor regimen. In conclusion, clinicians treating patients with NRTI should be aware of the risk of lactic acidosis and hepatic steatosis. When this is suspected, all NRTI must be stopped. The diagnosis can be made when elevated lactate levels and hepatic steatosis are present in the absence of other causes of liver disease.
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PMID:Hepatic steatosis and lactic acidosis caused by stavudine in an HIV-infected patient. 1106 65

Geriatric patients with major depression present clinical challenges not encountered in younger individuals, including a greater incidence of medical comorbidity, higher rates of multiple medication use, changes in drug metabolism due to age or physical illness, and increased sensitivity to antidepressant side effects. Nevertheless, successful treatment of depressive disorders in the elderly improves mental and physical functioning, decreases morbidity and perhaps mortality, and enhances quality of life. Recent research indicates that newer antidepressants are effective for late life depression and safer for older individuals. Among newer antidepressants, venlafaxine has a pharmacological profile that makes it an attractive choice for geriatric patients. It has limited potential to interact with other medications because it only weakly inhibits the cytochrome P450 system and binds to plasma proteins at a low level. Dosing may have to be adjusted for patients with renal failure, but typically not for those with liver disease or other medical conditions. Data from three double-blind and four open clinical trials support the safety and efficacy of venlafaxine for geriatric depression. Patients may experience transient, generally tolerable side effects such as insomnia, nausea, agitation, or dry mouth early in treatment, but more serious problems such as falls or cardiac rhythm disturbances seem to be rare. Treatment emergent hypertension occurs in a small percentage of older patients, generally at doses above 150 mg/day. Finally, emerging data suggest that venlafaxine may be effective for conditions such as stroke, anxiety, and neuropathic pain that frequently accompany depressive disorders in the elderly.
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PMID:Efficacy of venlafaxine in geriatric depression. 1109 16

A 66 year-old obese woman with arthrosis, self-medicated with oral nimesulide, 200 mg daily. After 6 weeks she developed nausea, jaundice and dark urine. Two weeks later she had recurrent hematemesis and was hospitalized. Besides obesity and anemia her physical examination was unremarkable. An upper GI endoscopy revealed 3 acute gastric ulcers and a 4th one in the pyloric channel. Abdominal ultrasonogram showed a slightly enlarged liver with diffuse reduction in ecogenicity; the gallbladder and biliary tract were normal. Blood tests demonstrated a conjugated hyperbilirubinemia (maximal total value: 18.4 mg/dl), ALAT 960 U/l, ASAT 850 U/l, GGT 420 U/l, alkaline phosphatases mildly elevated, pro-time 49% and albumin 2.7 mg/dl. Serum markers for hepatitis A, B and C viruses were negative. ANA, AMA, anti-SmA, were negative. Ceruloplasmin was normal. A liver biopsy showed bridging necrosis and other signs of acute toxic liver damage. Gastric ulcers healed after conventional treatment and hepatitis subsided after 2 months leaving no signs of chronic liver damage. The diagnosis of toxic hepatitis due to nimesulide was supported by the time-course of drug usage, sex, age, absence of other causes of liver disease, a compatible liver biopsy and the improvement after drug withdrawal. Peptic ulcers or toxic hepatitis have been previously described as independent adverse reactions in patients taking nimesulide or other NSAIDs but their simultaneous occurrence in a single patient is a unique event that deserves to be reported.
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PMID:[Bleeding gastric ulcers and acute hepatitis: 2 simultaneous adverse reactions due to nimesulide in a case]. 1122 44

Studies have found that people with HIV have significant reductions in S-adenosylmethionine (SAMe). SAMe is an important ingredient in reactions used to make a substance that holds myelin, the coating on nerve fibers, together. SAMe also has been shown to have value in treating fibromyalgia and Alzheimer's disease. The drug may have potential use in fighting liver disease as well by increasing glutathione production and reducing the symptoms of cholestasis. Methionine, a substance made into SAMe by the body, might help improve HIV-related myelopathy. A study is currently enrolling patients with HIV to evaluate methionine's effectiveness in treating myelopathy. Side effects of methionine include nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, and irritability. Contact information is provided.
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PMID:SAMe as it ever was? 1136 83

Our article concentrates on two acute states, which develop less dramatically but their after-effects may be very serious: Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and Ogilvie's syndrome. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis is a bacterial infection of the ascitic fluid without any intraperitoneal source of infection. Ascites is a condition of the disease but need not be clinically manifested. Spontaneous bacterial peritonitis comes usually during heavy hepatic impairment. Diagnosis can be set according: 1. Positive cultivation of ascitic fluid, 2. PMN levels higher than 250/mm3, 3. No infection, which may require a surgical intervention is apparent. Liver disease, which brings about the spontaneous bacterial peritonitis can be: 1. Chronic (e.g. alcoholic cirrhosis), 2. Subacute (e.g. alcoholic hepatitis), 3. Acute (e.g. fulminant hepatic failure). Mortality of this form of peritonitis can reach up to 46%. The most frequent etiological factor is alcohol and viral hepatitis, the most frequent agents are E. coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae. The disease is most effectively cured by cefalosporins of the third generation. With inadequate treatment, prognosis may be poor. Intestinal pseudoobstruction syndrome has clinical symptomatology of a serious impairment with ileus without signs of any mechanical intestinal obstruction. Syndrome can be classified according to its development: 1. Acute form--acute intestinal pseudoobstruction syndrome--Ogilvie's syndrome, 2. Chronic form--chronic intestinal pseudoobstruction syndrome. Pathogenic mechanism of the syndrome is not known. The disease is related to immobility, administration of some drugs, electrolyte imbalance and concomitant diseases (most frequently malignant tumors). Clinical symptomatology dominates nausea, vomiting, diffuse abdominal pain, constipation or diarrhoea. For diagnostics the first step should be termination of all medication, which could have causing affects, then taking native abdominal X-ray picture where gaseous intestinal distension can be prominent (coecum distended up to 9-12 cm). Identification of fluid surfaces is not usual. Endoscopic examination can exclude obstruction in the distal part of gut minimally. The most frequent complication is perforation of coecum. Pharmacological treatment relays on prokinetics. The basic intervention remains decompression by a rectal catheter or an effective coloscopic decompression with subsequent introduction of a cannula. Mortality of the disease fluctuates between 43 and 46%.
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PMID:[Acute states in gastroenterology: spontaneous bacterial peritonitis and the acute intestinal pseudoobstruction syndrome]. 1150 91

The management of dementia patients encompasses pharmacologic, behavioral, and psychosocial intervention strategies. Before pharmacologic intervention is instituted, it is important that sources of excess disability and comorbidity be eliminated or reduced. Identification of comorbid medical and psychiatric conditions, such as depression and delirium, should be identified and appropriately treated. Providing caregivers with education, support, and practical advice is a critical component of the management of the demented patient. The current standard of care for pharmacologic management of the cognitive and functional disabilities of AD consists of the combination of a cholinesterase inhibitor and high-dose vitamin E. This standard is based on the results of large-scale, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials. Cholinesterase inhibitors are the only FDA-approved pharmacologic treatments for AD. Cholinesterase inhibitors have been shown to be effective in the treatment of the cognitive, behavioral, and functional deficits of AD. Large-scale placebo-controlled trials of tacrine, donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine have demonstrated moderate benefits in patients with mild to moderate AD. Donepezil, rivastigmine, and galantamine are the first-line choices in the treatment of AD because of their lack of hepatotoxicity, ease of administration, few significant drug-drug interactions, and mild to moderate side effects. There are few contraindications to the use of cholinesterase inhibitors. Known hypersensitivity to a specific drug or its derivatives is the only true contraindication. Cautious administration of cholinesterase inhibitors is advised in patients who have a previous history of allergy or adverse reactions to prior cholinesterase inhibitors, severe liver disease, preexisting bradycardia, peptic ulcer disease, current alcoholism, asthma, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and anorexia are the most common side effects of cholinesterase inhibitors. These gastrointestinal side effects can be minimized by gradual dose increases, administration with food, adequate hydration, and judicious use of an antiemetic. Vitamin E has been demonstrated to slow the progression of AD in several small and one large placebo-controlled trials. Because of its low cost and safety, it is recommended in addition to a cholinesterase inhibitor for the treatment of AD. There are no FDA-approved treatments for DLB and VaD. One small placebo-controlled trial demonstrated that rivastigmine may be effective in the treatment of DLB. More large-scale placebo-controlled trials are needed to confirm the results of this study. Treatment of VaD focuses on the control, identification, and management of cerebrovascular disease and vascular risk factors. Although there are no peer-reviewed reports on the efficacy of cholinesterase inhibitors for VaD or mixed AD/VaD, early reports suggest that these agents may also be effective for mixed AD/VaD. The indications for the use of cholinesterase inhibitor drugs are eventually likely to broaden to include DLB, mixed AD/VaD, and AD in its more advanced stages.
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PMID:Pharmacologic treatments of dementia. 1217 Oct 61

Acute liver disease was diagnosed in three pregnant patients: two 30-year-old women had a 'haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets' (HELLP) syndrome and acute fatty liver of pregnancy, respectively, and a 20-year-old woman had acute liver failure due to acute hepatitis B. The first two patients had a caesarean section, the third one delivered her child, which died spontaneously shortly after birth at a gestational age of 23 weeks. She was then treated by liver transplantation. All three patients left the hospital in good condition. Liver diseases in pregnancy may be pregnancy-related, e.g. the HELLP syndrome and acute fatty liver of pregnancy, but they may also be coincidental phenomena, e.g. viral hepatitis. The HELLP syndrome is often associated with pre-eclampsia, and presents with epigastric pain and thrombocytopenia with haemolysis. Acute fatty liver disease and acute liver failure due to hepatitis present with liver insufficiency characterised by anorexia, nausea, coagulopathy, hypoglycaemia and elevated serum ammonia levels. Management depends on the diagnosis and the gestational age; pregnancy complicated by acute fatty liver disease should be terminated while pregnancy complicated by the HELLP syndrome early in pregnancy may be maintained to improve the outcome of the foetus. In acute liver failure due to viral hepatitis, termination of pregnancy alone does not affect the disease.
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PMID:[The pregnant patient with acute liver disease]. 1253 8

Acute liver failure and haemolytic syndrome appeared quite suddenly as the first manifestations of Wilson disease (WD) in five of our patients previously regarded as healthy persons (although an interview showed that 2-4 weeks prior to the illness the patients complained of several non-specific symptoms, such as abdominal pain, headaches, fever, weakness or behavioural changes). All the patients were young women (17-23 years), none of them had any history of liver disease. They were admitted with icterus, nausea, vomiting and symptoms of increasing haemolysis. The diagnosis of WD was given as disturbed copper metabolism. After a short period of observation ascites and anasarca occurred, haemorrhagic diathesis and other symptoms of liver failure increased. Levels of clotting factors decreased rapidly. Despite treatment with D-penicillamine, plasmapheresis, and symptomatic drugs, three of the women died in irreversible liver coma, due to the unavailability of liver transplantation. The fourth woman was carried to the Transplantation Centre, due to aggravation of the symptoms of liver failure, where liver transplantation was performed. Histopathologically micronodular cirrhosis was shown in all these cases. The fifth patient survived having undergone the above treatment without liver transplantation. The main differences between the patient who survived and those who died or underwent transplantation were relatively higher activity of alkaline phosphatase (26 U/l vs. 10-20 U/l), slightly higher levels of clotting factors and prothrombin time, which never fall below 68% of the control (versus 14-44% in other patients). Only in the surviving patient was the Kayser-Fleischer ring present. In four of our patients we found family members who were carriers of WD.
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PMID:Acute haemolytic syndrome and liver failure as the first manifestations of Wilson's disease. 1221 29


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