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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An outbreak of severe haemorrhagic illness began in the municipality of Guanarito, Portuguesa State, Venezuela, in September, 1989. Subsequent detailed study of 15 cases confirmed the presence of a new viral disease, designated Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever. Characteristic features are fever, toxicity, headache, arthralgia, diarrhoea, conjunctivitis, pharyngitis, leucopenia,
thrombocytopenia
, and haemorrhagic manifestations. Other features include facial oedema, cervical lymphadenopathy,
nausea
/vomiting, cough, chest or abdominal pain, and convulsions. The patients ranged in age from 6 to 54 years; all were residents of rural areas in central Venezuela, and 9 died. Infection with Guanarito virus, a newly recognised arenavirus, was shown by direct culture or by serological confirmation in all cases. Epidemiological studies suggest that the disease is endemic in some rural areas of central Venezuela and that it is rodent-borne. Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever has many similarities to Lassa fever and to the arenavirus haemorrhagic fevers that occur in Argentina and Bolivia.
...
PMID:Venezuelan haemorrhagic fever. 168 54
Sixty-six patients with locally advanced (Stages III and IV) carcinoma of the head and neck were treated with three cycles of induction chemotherapy, consisting of cisplatin, fluorouracil (FU) infusion, bleomycin, mitomycin, and hydroxyurea, followed by radiotherapy and/or surgery. There were 48 men and 18 women with a median age of 55 years (range, 18 to 75 years) and Karnofsky performance status of 80 (range, 40 to 90). Primary site was nasopharynx (28 patients), followed by larynx (12) and others (26). Forty-one (62%) patients were presented with Stage IV disease. The response rate to induction chemotherapy was 27% complete response, 50% partial response, 20% stable disease, and 3% progressive disease. There was no significant difference in response rate between patients with cancer of nasopharynx or other sites (P greater than 0.1). Survival was 61% at 24 months. Patients with cancer of nasopharynx had a better survival than those with other primaries (P = 0.033). Toxicities from chemotherapy included alopecia (73%),
nausea
/vomiting (66%), leukopenia (54%), stomatitis (36%), anemia (32%),
thrombocytopenia
(16%), and diarrhea (9%). Grade IV toxicity was not observed. Induction chemotherapy with this new regimen resulted in a high response rate but may not be superior to cisplatin and FU alone. It can be safely combined with radiotherapy as a potentially curative therapy in squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck. Chemotherapy followed by radiation therapy may yield survival similar to radical surgery in laryngeal and other head and neck cancers.
...
PMID:Induction chemotherapy with a new regimen alternating cisplatin, fluorouracil with mitomycin, hydroxyurea and bleomycin in carcinomas of nasopharynx or other sites of the head and neck region. 169 26
Twenty-five adult patients with resistant or early relapsing Hodgkin's disease have been treated with CAV combination chemotherapy (CCNU, melphalan and etoposide). All patients had previously received both MOPP and ABVD regimens (23 patients as primary therapy and two as first salvage). High-energy radiotherapy had been administered in one case. The CAV chemotherapy was used as first salvage therapy in 15 cases (60%); the remaining patients had been heavily pretreated with different regimens including alkylating agents, vinblastine, and/or nitrosourea derivatives before CAV for multiple relapses or progressive disease. At the initiation of CAV chemotherapy, 64% of patients had extranodal disease (20% with more than one site), and bone marrow was involved in 16% of total cases. Thirty-two percent of CAV patients had progressed during primary therapy, while only 20% of cases had relapsed after complete remission (CR). The CR rate after CAV therapy was 17% (4 of 24); partial responses were observed in 33% of patients, giving an overall response rate of 50%. The response was influenced by the presence of nodal disease and by a prior response to chemotherapy. Considering the 15 patients who received CAV therapy as first salvage, the CR rate was 37%. The median survival from the initiation of CAV therapy was 23 months for the whole group of patients, and was not reached at 2 years for those who received CAV as first salvage therapy. Toxicity consisted of
nausea
(100% of cases), vomiting (63%), reversible alopecia (83%), mild to moderate leukopenia and
thrombocytopenia
(54% and 21%, respectively). No therapy-related deaths were observed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:CAV chemotherapy (CCNU, melphalan, etoposide) as salvage treatment for relapsing or resistant Hodgkin's disease. 170 10
A phase I trial of fazarabine (ara-AC, 1-beta-D-arabinofuranosyl-5-azacytosine, NSC 281272) administered as a 24-h continuous infusion was performed in 24 adults with solid tumor malignancies. The majority of patients had received prior marrow-suppressive therapy. Level 7 (54.5 mg/m2/h for 24 h) was the maximum tolerated dose since during 6 evaluable first courses, 2 episodes of grade 4 granulocytopenia and 3 episodes of grade 3 occurred. Moderate
thrombocytopenia
also occurred at level 7 with 3 episodes of grade 1 and 1 episode of grade 4
thrombocytopenia
during 6 first course treatments. Minimal myelosuppression, principally leukopenia, was seen prior to level 7. The nadir WBC through 47 courses had a linear relationship with plasma steady-state concentrations of ara-AC. The only other toxicity noted was moderate
nausea
/vomiting, which did not appear to be dose related. Plasma steady-state concentrations of ara-AC were reached in all patients within 4-6 h and ranged from 1.1 microM (11 mg/m2/h for 24 h) to 7.5 microM (54.5 mg/m2/h for 24 h). The mean total body clearance of ara-AC for 47 courses, levels 1-7, was 592 +/- 147 (SD) ml/min/m2 which is similar to prior pharmacokinetic data from the 24-h and 72-h infusion trials of the Pediatric and Medicine Branches, respectively. There were no objective disease responses during the trial. The recommended adult phase II dose for a 24-h infusion of ara-AC is 45-50 mg/m2/h.
...
PMID:Phase I clinical trial of fazarabine as a twenty-four-hour continuous infusion. 170 65
Twenty-four cases of dengue haemorrhagic fever/dengue shock syndrome were studied in Delhi in the months of September and October, 1988. The majority of these cases were boys aged 6-10 years. Classical symptoms of dengue (fever, headache, aesthesia, myalgia) occurred in all the patients. Digestive symptoms (
nausea
, vomiting, anorexia, abdominal pain and hepatomegaly) were also common. Haemorrhagic manifestations were present in 41.7% of the cases. Of these, 90% had gastrointestinal haemorrhages. Shock occurred in 17 cases (70.8%).
Thrombocytopenia
and prolongation of coagulation profile were found in 62.5% of cases. Three patients (12.5%) who presented with encephalopathy died. The other 21 patients recovered after an average period of 2-8 days.
...
PMID:An epidemic of dengue haemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome in Delhi: a clinical study. 170 58
A combination of mitomycin C, vindesine and melphalan was administered to 33 patients with heavily pretreated refractory breast cancer. The overall response rate was 27% with a mean duration of more than 10.2 months. A stabilization with a mean duration of 5.1 months was seen in 56% of cases, while 20% of patients progressed. Gastrointestinal toxicity, mostly grade 1 or 2
nausea
/vomiting was seen in 85% of cases, grade 1 or 2 leukopenia in 60% of patients, and grade 1 or 2
thrombocytopenia
in 42%. Considering the good compliance of this regimen and the poor prognosis of patients with refractory advanced breast cancer, this combination can be useful as a palliative treatment of breast carcinoma.
...
PMID:Combination chemotherapy with mitomycin C, vindesine and melphalan for refractory metastatic breast cancer. 170 43
Ifosfamide is an oxazaphosphorine alkylating agent with a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity. It is a prodrug metabolised in the liver by cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase enzymes to isofosforamide mustard, the active alkylating compound. Mesna, a uroprotective thiol agent, is routinely administered concomitantly with ifosfamide, and has almost eliminated ifosfamide-induced haemorrhagic cystitis and has reduced nephron toxicity. Therapeutic studies, mostly noncomparative in nature, have demonstrated the efficacy of ifosfamide/mesna alone, or more commonly as a component of combination regimens, in a variety of cancers. In patients with relapsed or refractory disseminated nonseminomatous testicular cancer, a salvage regimen of ifosfamide/mesna, cisplatin and either etoposide or vinblastine produced complete response in approximately one-quarter of patients. As a component of both induction and salvage chemotherapeutic regimens, ifosfamide/mesna has produced favourable response rates in small cell lung cancer, paediatric solid tumours, non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma, and ovarian cancer. Induction therapy with ifosfamide/mesna-containing chemotherapeutic regimens has been encouraging in non-small cell lung cancer, adult soft-tissue sarcomas, and as neoadjuvant therapy in advanced cervical cancer. As salvage therapy, ifosfamide/mesna-containing combinations have a palliative role in advanced breast cancer and advanced cervical cancer. Ifosfamide/mesna can elicit responses in patients refractory to numerous other antineoplastic drugs, including cyclophosphamide. With administration of concomitant mesna to protect against ifosfamide-induced urotoxicity, the principal dose-limiting toxicity of ifosfamide is myelosuppression; leucopenia is generally more severe than
thrombocytopenia
. Reversible CNS adverse effects ranging from mild somnolence and confusion to severe encephalopathy and coma can occur in approximately 10 to 20% of patients after intravenous infusion, and the incidence of neurotoxicity may be increased to 50% after oral administration because of differences in the preferential route of metabolism between the 2 routes of administration. Other adverse effects of ifosfamide include nephrotoxicity, alopecia, and
nausea
/vomiting. In general, intravenously administered mesna is associated with a low incidence of adverse effects; however, gastrointestinal disturbances are common following oral administration. Thus, ifosfamide/mesna is an important and worthwhile addition to the currently available range of chemotherapeutic agents. It has a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity and causes less marked myelosuppression than many other cytotoxic agents. At present, the role of ifosfamide/mesna in refractory germ cell testicular cancer is clearly defined; however, its overall place in the treatment of other forms of cancer awaits delineation in future well-controlled comparative studies.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide/mesna. A review of its antineoplastic activity, pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic efficacy in cancer. 172 Mar 82
Twenty patients with biopsy-proven metastatic malignant melanoma, previously treated with interleukin-2 (IL-2), received combination chemotherapy for progressive disease. Treatment included carmustine, cisplatin, dacarbazine, and tamoxifen (BCDT).
Nausea
was the most common toxicity (100%) and usually was mild. Persistent
thrombocytopenia
was the most frequent toxicity limiting further treatment. Eleven patients (55%) had an objective partial response, three patients (15%) had a minor response, and six patients (30%) had no change or progressive disease in response to this treatment. These results were comparable to the high response rates (21 of 40, 53%) achieved with BCDT in previously untreated patients with melanoma. It was concluded that prior therapy using IL-2 does not significantly alter the response rate of metastatic melanoma to BCDT, thus suggesting that immunomodulators (e.g., IL-2) and chemotherapeutic agents are not cross-resistant treatments.
...
PMID:Effective chemotherapy for melanoma after treatment with interleukin-2. 172 71
Eflornithine was offered as compassionate treatment of 33 episodes of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in 31 patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome who were intolerant of and/or unresponsive to conventional trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole or pentamidine therapy. A full course of eflornithine consisted of ten days at 400 mg/kg/d but no more than 30 g/d in four divided intravenous doses, four days at 300 mg/kg/d in four divided intravenous doses, and then up to six weeks at 300 mg/kg/d in four divided oral doses where tolerated. Of 33 patient-episodes, 15 patients were discharged from the hospital without need for supplemental oxygen after receiving ten or more days of parenteral therapy and were classified as responders. Of the 16 episodes classified as treatment failures, death occurred within the first 10 days of therapy in 12, and supplemental oxygen could not be withdrawn in 4. The other two patients left the hospital without need of oxygen after receiving one and six days of treatment with eflornithine and were not considered evaluable for efficacy. The most serious adverse effect was
thrombocytopenia
, which occurred in 12 of 19 patients treated for ten days or more. Serious bleeding associated with
thrombocytopenia
was observed in two patients. Other common adverse effects were anorexia,
nausea
, and diarrhea. Prior to receiving eflornithine, 13 of 15 responders had received ten or more days of conventional therapy without demonstrating clinical improvement. Two had improved while receiving conventional therapy but were switched to eflornithine because of a treatment-limiting adverse effect of standard therapy. These results suggest that eflornithine may be useful as an alternative therapeutic agent for Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. Studies designed to determine proper dosage, duration of therapy, and efficacy as primary therapy are warranted.
...
PMID:Eflornithine treatment of refractory Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 172 13
To date, dacarbazine (DTIC) has been the most effective drug in the treatment of advanced metastatic melanoma, achieving response rates of up to 28% (mean, 21%). Multidrug responses were generally no better than those obtained using monotherapy. A quite promising clinical trial was conducted using the new nitrosourea fotemustine. A total of 19 patients presenting with advanced malignant melanoma (clinical stage IV according to the 1987 UICC classification system) underwent treatment involving a more rapid infusion of the drug and a reduction in the rest period from 5 to 3 weeks. This monotherapy with fotemustine yielded two complete responses and seven partial responses; in addition, four patients showed no change and six cases progressed after the induction cycle (median duration of response to date, 7.6 months, including four cases that have not relapsed). Fotemustine was well tolerated by the patients, with the only mild side effects being
thrombocytopenia
, leukocytopenia and easily controlled
nausea
/vomiting. Preclinical studies performed previously indicated that fotemustine inhibits enzymes involved in the ribonucleotide reduction pathway (i.e. DNA synthesis), whereby responding patients (n = 3) appeared to favor the thioredoxin reductase/thioredoxin electron transfer to ribonucleotide reductase, whereas non-responders (n = 4) expressed the alternate glutathione reductase/glutaredoxin mechanism. The 47% response rate obtained in these studies vs the 24% reported previously for fotemustine may reflect variations in enzymes in the ribonucleotide reduction pathway in different patients. However, the efficacy of fotemustine against advanced melanoma warrants more extensive trials of this drug, especially since the quality of life of the patients during and after chemotherapy was not severely affected.
...
PMID:Positive phase II study in the treatment of advanced malignant melanoma with fotemustine. 174 55
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