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)

Adult T-cell leukemia (ATL) is an extremely difficult disease to treat. The median survival of patients with this disease has been reported to be only about 3 mo even with intensive treatment. We have treated five ATL patients (four males and one female, 42 to 72 yr of age) with total body irradiation (TBI). One patient who received 150 rad of TBI achieved complete remission and has been well without treatment for over a year. One hundred and thirty rad of TBI was administered to another patient, resulting in control of the leukocyte count at around 10,000/microliter and survival for 6 mo. Three patients received 100 rad of TBI. Only one of these patients has lived with leukemic cells for over a year without treatment. The other two patients relapsed rapidly and despite various kinds of treatment, such as a second course of TBI, extracorporeal irradiation of the blood, cytapheresis and combination chemotherapy consisting of pepleomycin, vincristine and a high dose of prednisolone, expired from pneumonia in 3 and 4 mo respectively. In all except the last two patients, thrombocytopenia and anemia developed and lasted for 2.5 wk to 3 mo and granulocytopenia occurred only in the patient who received 150 rad of TBI. Slight nausea and loss of appetite were noticed in one patient. It seems that 100 to 150 rad of TBI is effective against ATL, with acceptable side effects.
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PMID:Total body irradiation as a primary treatment for adult T-cell leukemia. 634 47

Results with the use of a diaphragmatic graft in the surgical relief of achalasia are reported for 44 patients. The operative technique involves construction of a pedicle flap of diaphragm the size of the muscular defect on the lower segment of the esophagus and suture of the transplanted diaphragmatic pedicle to the site of the esophageal muscular defect. Immediate operative results were good; there was only one complication, a case of pneumonia that was cured. Patients were followed from 3 months to 19 years. Two patients were lost to follow-up. Excellent results were obtained in 39 patients; 3 patients still had nausea and heartburn, but were better than before operation. This procedure has three advantages: (1) it prevents occurrence of fistula and diverticulum at the site of the esophageal muscular defect; (2) it effectively eliminates formation of restenosis due to scar and reflux esophagitis; and (3) it allows the cardia to recover its normal function and the esophagus to return to normal size at the site of operation.
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PMID:Treatment of esophageal achalasia (cardiospasm) with diaphragmatic graft: report of 44 patients. 640 96

Between October 1990 and November 1991, a total of 16 male patients with advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma were treated by neoadjuvant chemotherapy before conventional radiotherapy. They belonged to the AJCC stage IV with multiple bulky neck nodes metastases. The chemotherapy consisted of bleomycin, epirubicin, and cisplatin. Six patients completed 3 cycles, 9 patients finished 2 cycles, and 1 patient received 1 cycle of chemotherapy. Seven of the 16 patients (44%) were in complete response, and 50% (8/16) achieved partial response. The overall response rate was 94%. The major toxicities consisted of leucopenia (12/37 cycles had grade III-IV), nausea/vomiting, alopecia. Aplastic marrow developed in 1 patient, and one died of bleomycin-induced pneumonitis. Subsequent radiation therapy was well tolerated. After a minimal follow-up time of 24 months, the 2-year actuarial survival rate was 56%. Although we confirmed the impressively high response rate of this regimen, the toxicities were high and most patients failed at distant site(s). The efficacy of neoadjuvant chemotherapy for advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma is doubtful and should be further studied in prospective randomized trials.
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PMID:Neoadjuvant chemotherapy for advanced nasopharyngeal carcinoma. 753 76

The prevention of cerebral toxoplasmosis and of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is an essential objective in the management of patients infected with HIV. Given that roxithromycin is active in vitro against Toxoplasma gondii and that in 1989 Dolermann reported the effective treatment of P. carinii respiratory infections with erythromycin, a randomized pilot study was undertaken in 52 patients infected with HIV. Patients were treated with either: a monthly dose of pentamidine aerosol (300 mg); roxithromycin once a week (300 mg t.i.d.); or a combination of pentamidine aerosol and roxithromycin. Intention to treat analysis was applied to these 52 patients, all of whom received at least one treatment dose. Five out of 18 patients treated with pentamidine aerosol, 1/17 patients treated with pentamidine aerosol + roxithromycin and none of the 17 patients treated with roxithromycin developed cerebral toxoplasmosis (p = 0.038). P. carinii pneumonia was diagnosed in one patient in the pentamidine aerosol-treated group, in one patient treated with roxithromycin and in none of the patients treated with pentamidine aerosol + roxithromycin (non-significant difference). Four cases of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium avium-intracellulare infection were seen in the pentamidine aerosol-treated group (p = 0.028) and none in the roxithromycin groups. Adverse events leading to the discontinuation of treatment occurred in 5/34 (14.7%) patients treated with roxithromycin. Nausea, abdominal pain and raised transaminases occurred in four patients and a skin allergy in the final patient. Roxithromycin appears to be effective in the prevention of pulmonary pneumocystis infection and of cerebral toxoplasmosis in HIV-infected patients. However, these results require confirmation in a larger study.
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PMID:Prevention of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia and of cerebral toxoplasmosis by roxithromycin in HIV-infected patients. 778 14

The clinical experience of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) + patients treated with oral atovaquone for acute Pneumocytstis carinii pneumonia (PCP) under a Treatment Investigational New Drug (IND) protocol (mild or moderate PCP) and an Open-Label Study protocol (severe PCP) was evaluated. A total of 940 patients intolerant of or unresponsive to trimethoprimsulfamethoxazole were enrolled from private practices, clinics, and institutional HIV treatment centers in the United States. Demographics data and the history and severity of PCP were collected at enrollment. The number of therapy days, adverse experiences, clinical response to therapy, and mortality were collected at day 21. Reporting of serious, unexpected adverse experiences attributable to therapy was required. Of the 760 (96%) patients with mild to moderate disease for whom follow-up observation was complete, 591 (78%) responded clinically to treatment, 177 patients (23%) discontinued treatment prematurely, and 50 patients (7%) died. Of the 140 patients (95%) with severe PCP with follow-up data, 79 (56%) responded to treatment, 45 (32%) discontinued treatment early, and 53 patients (38%) died. Adverse events that resulted in temporary or permanent discontinuation of therapy included diarrhea, vomiting, elevated liver enzyme levels, nausea, and fever. No serious unexpected adverse events attributable to the drug were reported. The treatment IND mechanism enabled a large number of patients with acute PCP to be treated with this experimental therapy while the drug was under regulatory view.
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PMID:Clinical experience with atovaquone on a treatment investigational new drug protocol for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. 778 26

We describe the development of temporal lobe epilepsy in an 84-year-old man who had suffered domoic acid intoxication. Following intoxication he had nausea, vomiting, confusion, and coma. Generalized convulsions and complex partial status epilepticus progressively developed. After 3 weeks he improved and was seizure free with severe residual memory deficit. Electroencephalograms initially showed periodic epileptiform discharges, later evolving to epileptic abnormalities over frontotemporal regions with diffuse slow waves. Eight months after the intoxication the electroencephalogram was normal. One year after the acute episode, complex partial seizures developed. Electroencephalograms showed epileptic discharges independently over both temporal lobes, with left-sided predominance. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed a hyperintense T2-weighted signal and atrophy of both hippocampi; a positron emission tomographic scan showed bitemporal decreased glucose metabolism. Pneumonia developed and the patient died 3 1/4 years after the intoxication. Autopsy disclosed severe bilateral hippocampal sclerosis. The seizures following acute domoic acid intoxication, the postmortem pathology, and the fact that temporal lobe epilepsy developed 1 year after intoxication indicate that the human hippocampus is also vulnerable to kainate receptor excitotoxicity, and provide strong evidence supporting the role of excitotoxic injury in epileptogenesis. This report provides a unique human parallel to, and validates the animal model of, kainate-induced epilepsy as an important tool for studying temporal lobe epilepsy.
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PMID:Temporal lobe epilepsy caused by domoic acid intoxication: evidence for glutamate receptor-mediated excitotoxicity in humans. 781 46

The use of alpha interferon (alpha IFN) and, more recently, of the purine analogues deoxycoformycin (dCF) and 2-chlorodeoxyadenosine (2-CdA) has dramatically improved the prognosis of patients affected by hairy cell leukemia (HCL). DCF has been shown to induce an higher and more durable response rate than IFN, with only moderate myelosuppression and relatively few side effects. In this paper, we report our experience with dCF in a series of 38 HCL patients who had progression of their disease after IFN therapy. Serum interleukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta), soluble interleukin-2 receptors (sIl-2R) and Tumor Necrosis Factor alpha (TNF alpha) levels were also evaluated before, both during and after treatment in order to monitor clinical response. Two schedules of treatment were employed: 23 patients were treated with the EORTC protocol and the following 15 with the NCI regimen. The overall response rate was 94.7%; no significant differences in response rates were observed between the two schedules. In respect to toxicity, we recorded nausea and in two cases a cutaneous rash. Four patients experienced localized herpes zoster and one had a fungal pneumonia. Median overall survival after therapy is 38.5 months, 55 percent of patients enrolled in the EORTC schedule and 77% of those who received the NCI program are currently in CCR at 3 years. Serum IL-1 beta and sIL-2R levels significantly decreased after treatment, while no significant changes in serum TNF alpha levels were observed. In our study, dCF was confirmed as an effective agent in HCL, inducing an high response rate with only moderate side effects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Deoxycoformycin induces long-lasting remissions in hairy cell leukemia: clinical and biological results of two different regimens. 782 42

A 52-year-old man was admitted to our hospital because of oliguric renal failure. The patient was well until four weeks earlier, when he developed nausea and anorexia. The urea nitrogen was 179 mg/dl, creatinine 29.2 mg/dl, uric acid 19.0 mg/dl and potassium 8.6 mEq/1. Hemodialysis was started immediately after admission. Bone marrow aspiration showed atypical plasma cell infiltration consistent with multiple myeloma. The immunoelectrophoresis revealed urinary lambda -type Bence Jones protein and serum IgD- lambda -type M protein. The findings of renal biopsy study were consistent with myeloma kidney. On the fourth hospital day, administration of prednisolone 40 mg and melphalan 2 mg was started. The patient also underwent double filtration plasma-pheresis (DFPP). Serum IgD level was decreased from 950 to 113 mg/dl. After a course of chemotherapy, however, he developed severe leukopenia and was complicated with methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) pneumonia. This complication was successfully treated with imipenem/cilastation and vancomycin combined with granulocyte colony stimulating factor (G-CSF). The patient was discharged and returned to work on maintenance hemodialysis. Fifteen months after the presentation, he manifested progressive peripheral nerve disturbances. Three months later, the patient died--not from renal failure, but from ventricular arrhythmia. The application of maintenance dialysis therapy to myelomatosis has until now been questioned. The present case, however, suggests that aggressive treatment consisting of chronic dialysis therapy as well as chemotherapy and plasma exchange should be administered even in patients with established renal failure.
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PMID:[Maintenance hemodialysis in IgD- lambda -type multiple myeloma associated with severe renal failure]. 813 51

Cefepime, a novel, injectable alpha-methoxyimino aminothiazolyl cephalosporin, is active in vitro against many of the Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria which cause severe infections, including Pseudomonas aeruginosa. It is more active than existing third-generation cephalosporins against multiply-resistant strains of Enterobacteriaceae because of its low affinity for beta-lactamases and its resistance to hydrolysis by these enzymes. Cefepime retains its high potency of activity against methicillin-susceptible Staphylococcus aureus, coagulase-negative staphylococci and streptococci other than enterococci. Seventy-four patients (46 male and 28 female) were treated with cefepime 2 g i.v. every 12 h; 61 patients were evaluable for efficacy (39 male and 22 female). The infections included pneumonia caused by Gram-negative bacilli (21 patients, six with bacteraemia), septicaemia (seven), pyelonephritis (two), osteomyelitis (23, mainly caused by S. aureus), septic arthritis (four) and soft tissue infections (four, one with bacteraemia). Responses were as follows: 52 (85.3%) patients cured; three (4.9%) improved and six (9.8%) failed. The failures included three patients with osteomyelitis, one with pyelonephritis and two with pneumonia. The pathogens and eradication rates were: S. aureus 23/24 (96%), Staphylococcus epidermidis 4/4, Streptococcus spp. 10/10 (100%), P. aeruginosa 11/14 (79%), Enterobacteriaceae 28/28 (100%), Haemophilus spp. 3/3 and others 7/7. Clinical adverse effects included diarrhoea in 11 patients (14.9%) nausea in five (6.8%) and pruritus in three (4.1%). Laboratory abnormalities included leucopenia in three patients (4.1%) and direct Coombs' conversion in 32 (43.2%). Patients were treated for an average of 31.8 days for osteomyelitis and 11.9 days for other infections.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Cefepime as treatment for osteomyelitis and other severe bacterial infections. 815 Jul 58

A 32-year-old man developed a rash on his body and extremities following acute fever of a few days duration, and also noticed pain and spontaneous tingling sensations in his lower extremities. Because severe pneumonia with dyspnea and low arterial blood oxygen concentration were found on examination, he was admitted and treated. After recovering from pneumonia in two months, he complained of abdominal symptoms, such as constipation, nausea and vomiting, spontaneous tingling sensations in the lower extremities, and orthostatic dizziness and fainting. On neurological examination, a mild to moderate muscle weakness was found in the distal muscles of both extremities. The ankle jerk was absent. Both superficial and deep sensations were moderately to severely decreased in the feet with positive Romberg's sign. Constipation and vomiting with nausea were noted. Clinical and laboratory examinations revealed marked orthostatic hypotension and hypohidrosis. Motor and sensory conduction studies indicated the presence of axonal degeneration and segmental demyelination and remyelination in the limbs nerves. CSF examination indicated that protein was 150 mg/dl and the cell count to be 18/mm3. Titer of antibody to rubella virus was significantly elevated. There were no other abnormalities to indicate the cause of motor, sensory and autonomic neuropathies. Therefore, the diagnosis of acute polyradiculoneuropathy with autonomic disturbances after rubella infection, which is rare in the literature, was made.
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PMID:[A case of acute polyradiculoneuropathy with autonomic disturbances following rubella infection]. 826 90


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