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)

Allergic and pseudoallergic reactions caused by foods respectively food-additives present cutaneous (urticaria, erythrodermia), gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea) and respiratory symptoms (allergic bronchial asthma). The anaphylactic shock is the most severe manifestation. Exact diagnosis is based on anamnesis, skin-tests, laboratory investigations, dietetic test procedures and oral provocation. In allergic and pseudoallergic reactions the adequate therapy is the avoidance of the causative agent (diet).
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PMID:[Food allergies and pseudo-allergies--mechanism, clinical aspects and diagnosis]. 219 98

Twenty-seven patients with metastatic cancer were treated with a daily continuous intravenous (IV) infusion of recombinant human interleukin-2 (rhIL-2) along with daily intramuscular recombinant interferon-alpha-2a (rIFN-alpha-2a) 4 days per week for 4 weeks with repeated treatment after 2 to 4 weeks of rest. The maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) was 3 million U/m2/d of rhIL-2 with 5 to 10 million U/m2/d of rIFN-alpha-2a. The dose-limiting toxicities are moderate hypotension requiring low doses of pressors and chronic fatigue associated with decreased performance status. Other common side effects included fever, chills, fluid retention, nausea/vomiting, erythrodermia, weight loss, elevated liver transminase levels, anemia, thrombocytopenia, and CNS toxic effects. There were seven objective responses among 25 evaluable patients. Four major responses (one complete response and three partial responses) were observed among 10 patients with melanoma treated with the MTD level. These data suggest that for cancer patients, concomitant rhIL-2 and rIFN-alpha-2a therapy is tolerable and has manageable side effects. Further phase II studies will be needed to define the antitumor activity of this combination.
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PMID:Concomitant administration of recombinant human interleukin-2 and recombinant interferon alpha-2A in cancer patients: a phase I study. 280 85

High dose Cytarabin in relapsed and refractory acute leukaemia. High dose cytarabin can be very effective for the treatment of acute leukaemia resistent to conventional cytarabin doses. Therefore 10 patients (6 males, 4 females) with ages ranging from 18 to 58 years (median: 34 years) refractory to conventional induction therapy were treated with 1 hour infusions of high dose cytarabin (3 g/m2 q 12 h for 6 days) 2 patients got additional 20 mg/m2 doxorubicin on days 7 to 9. According to this treatment, in 5 of the 10 patients complete remissions could be achieved. Without further treatment 3 patients relapsed after 4, 7 and 15 months leading to death in 2 or 3 months. 19 months after treatment 1 patient is in complete remission, though demonstrating meningosis leukaemica 5 months after high dose cytarabin. Another patient relapsed 14 months after high dose cytarabin, reaching another complete remission after treatment according to a ALL/AUL protocol [7]. 2 patients died in bone marrow aplasia and 2 patients did not show any response, dying 11 months after high dose cytarabin application. All patients demonstrated vomiting, nausea, diarrhea and allopecia. Bone marrow was profoundly depressed in all patients with severe granulocytopenia and thrombocytopenia for periods from 7 to 34 days. 3 to 5 days after the end of high dose cytarabin therapy 3 patients developed acute ceratitis and 2 patients conjunctivitis. 3 patients showed erythrodermia of their skin with epidermolysis in 2 of these patients.
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PMID:[High-dose cytarabine treatment: a promising therapy modality in acute resistant myeloid leukemias in recurrence]. 388 15

We have treated 48 cases of onychomycosis (of which 37 were caused by dermatophytes, 10 by yeasts and one by Scopulariopsis brevicaulis) with 200 mg ketoconazole daily. We obtained recovery in 65 p. 100 of the cases of onyxis caused by dermatophytes and in 80 p. 100 of the cases of onychomycosis due to Candida. The one patient presenting an infection with Scopulariopsis brevicaulis recovered in 13 months. The average duration necessary to obtain complete recovery was 6 1/2 months for onychomycosis of the hands due to dermatophytes and 12 1/2 months for those of the feet. Perionyxis due to Candida needed 2 months of treatment with this drug, however 6 months of treatment were necessary to obtain recovery for onycholysis due to Candida. Biological tests remained normal and the side-effects were minimal and essentially gastrointestinal in our study. Ketoconazole is an effective treatment for onychomycosis: it is active against the different mycotic agents infecting nails and well tolerated by the patient. Several minor effects such as itching, nausea, headache and more serious reactions such as erythrodermia and hepatitis have been reported. Regular control and biological tests are therefore necessary. Patients with other diseases should avoid the use of ketoconazole for treatment of onychomycosis.
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PMID:[Ketoconazole and onychomycosis]. 608 41