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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Bromocriptine 2-5 mg twice daily is effective in the treatment of both normoprolactinaemic and hyperprolactinaemic secondary amenorrhoea. This was demonstrated by the restoration of menstrual cycle and/or ovulation in 9 of 18 normoprolactinaemic and in 8 of 14 hyperprolactinaemic patients taking bromocriptine. Serum-
prolactin
level decreased in both groups of patients, and usually menstruation was recovered within 8 weeks'treatment. Galactorrhoea disappeared in 7 of 9 hyperprolactinaemic patients, and 2 became pregnant. After treatment had ceased spontaneous menstrual activity continued in 4 patients. 16 patients had side-effects the commonest being
nausea
and vertigo. These usually disappeared with the dosage was reduced, but 5 patients refused to continue. These results point to a new approach in the treatment of secondary amenorrhoea, even in those patients whose clinical findings give no indication of
prolactin
suppression.
...
PMID:Bromocriptine treatment of secondary amenorrhoea. 5
Bromocriptine, a lysergic acid derivative with a bromine atom at position 2, has been found to have unique effects on the dopamine receptors in the pituitary and central nervous system and peripherally. It is rapidly and completely absorbed from the gut and is mainly excreted in the bile and faeces. It seems to have a particular specificity for the pituitary prolactinotrophe although it does have other effects in different diseases states. In spite of the fact that it is an ergot derivative, it is remarkably free of ergot vascular side effects in the doses needed for therapeutic benefit. The most common adverse effect are
nausea
, vomiting and postural symptoms. These can be overcome by starting at low doses and increasing the therapeutic levels. Its major use is in the suppression of
prolactin
in states where this hormone is elevated irrespective of cause. It has also been used in the treatment of acromegaly and is under investigation for use in other disease states probably linked with
prolactin
system or dopaminergic receptors.
...
PMID:Pharmacology of bromocriptine in health and disease. 22 67
10 amenorrhea-patients and 5 galactorrhea-amenorrhea-patients were treated wi2-Br-alpha-ergocryptine (CB 154) as a specific
prolactin
inhibitor. Side-effects, such as headaches, dizziness, and
nausea
could be reduced to a minimum by delivering the drug with the meal at night. Before and under the treatment hormone levels were determined in plasma and 24-hour-urine. In the beginning all 15 patients showed a hyperprolactinaemia with a nearly always simultaneously existing hypogonadotropinaemia and the absence of LH-peaks. Also the estrogen- and progesterone-concentrations were on the lower normal level or extremely suppressed. In all patients CB 154 therapy led to a quick decrease of the
prolactin
levels, to a regaining of typical LH- and FSH-episodes, as well as to a regeneration of ovarian function. 5 women reacted with an ovulation, 3 became pregnant. The galactorrhea diminished significantly and stopped finally after a treatment of one week to 6 months. Discontinuation of CB 154-therapy, however, often provoked the galactorrhea-amenorrhea-syndrome again. For women with normoprolactinaemic amenorrhea a gestagen- and estrogen-test were carried out in order to classify the amenorrhea-type and it was tried to induce an ovulation with Dyneric. For patients with a strong desire for children and without any organic cause for their sterility, in cases of ovarian insufficiency grade I and II a HMG-HCG-treatment was often indicated. In spite of a precise control in order to avoid an overstimulation of the ovaries about 1% of the Dyneric-treated and even 30% of the HMG-HCG-treated patients developed ovarian cysts. In spite of high doses of gonadotropins only 32,5% of our sterility-patients (group I and II) became pregnant, whereas about 60% of the hyperprolactinaemic amenorrhea-patients (group VI) conceived under CB 154 treatment.
...
PMID:[Hyper- and normoprolactinaemia with amenorrhea and galactorrhea-amenorrhea-syndrom (author's transl)]. 58 43
The amenorrhea-galactorrhea syndrome which occurs at a time other than the post-partum period is most often seen in association with a tumor of the pituitary gland; the symptoms are caused by a hypersecretion of
prolactin
. Among a series of 19 patients in Tel Aviv who underwent surgery for treatment of pituitary tumors, 2 presented with the amenorrhea-galactorrhea syndrome. The first patient, a 16 year old, presented with headaches,
nausea
, and diplopia; she underwent a series of 3 surgical procedures and died of a respiratory arrest in the third post-operative period. The second patient was a 39 year old woman who had borne 5 children; she presented with loss of vision, underwent surgery, and did well post-operatively. The authors point out that whereas either amenorrhea or galactorrhea alone may be associated with a number of disorders, the combination of the two symptoms is characteristic of pituitary tumors. Both patients who were presented in this article had chromophobe adenomas of the pituitary. The authors also discuss the various biologic actions of
prolactin
and its interrelationships with other hormones.
...
PMID:[Pituitary tumors manifesting with amenorrhea-galactorrhea]. 96 24
This study reports a case of allergy to ergot-derived drugs in a patient with a
prolactin
(
PRL
)-secreting microadenoma. The anamnesis revealed allergic reactions to the administration of analgesics and antibiotics. The administration of dopamine agonist drugs, such as bromocriptine (BRC; 2.5 mg) or lisuride (0.2 mg), induced after a few minutes the appearance of
nausea
, vomiting, postural hypotension, headache, edema of the glottis with dispnea and acroedema. The edemas disappeared a few hours after the administration of antihistaminic drugs while
nausea
, vomiting, postural hypotension and headache persisted for a few days. Therefore, the patient was tested with another dopamine agonist non-ergot-derived drug, quinagolide (CV 205-502), which did not cause side effects or allergic reactions. Furthermore, not only was the responsiveness to the drug optimal but it also normalized the
PRL
levels, and menses reappeared after more than a 5-year amenorrhea. This report suggests that ergot-derived drugs, such as lisuride and BRC, seldom induce allergic reactions apart from common side effects. Consequently, the feasibility of using a new drug with a different molecular structure (non-ergot derived) effective in the therapy of hyperprolactinemic syndromes represents a good alternative to conventional therapy.
...
PMID:Usefulness of CV 205-502 in a case of allergy to ergot-derived drugs. 130 52
The neuroendocrine response to L-5-hydroxytryptophan was compared in 37 prepubertal children who met the Research Diagnostic Criteria for major depressive disorder with that in 23 normal children with no lifetime history of any psychiatric disorder and very low rates of depression in both first- and second-degree relatives. Intravenous L-5-hydroxytryptophan (0.8 mg/kg) was given over a 1-hour interval after preloading with oral carbidopa, an inhibitor of peripheral but not central L-5-hydroxytryptophan metabolism. L-5-Hydroxytryptophan, a precursor of serotonin, increases serotonin turnover in the central nervous system when given after carbidopa. Seven (19%) of the 37 children with major depressive disorder and two (9%) of the 23 normal children had
nausea
or vomiting and therefore did not complete the full infusion. They were subsequently excluded from data analysis. After this stimulation,
prolactin
, cortisol, and growth hormone secretion were compared between diagnostic groups. The depressed children secreted significantly less cortisol (effect size, 0.70) and significantly more
prolactin
(effect size, 0.83). There was a sex-by-diagnosis interaction in
prolactin
response to L-5-hydroxytryptophan and, on examination, the
prolactin
hypersecretion was seen in depressed girls but not in depressed boys compared with same-sex controls. There was no significant stimulation of growth hormone in either group. These findings are consistent with dysregulation of central serotonergic systems in childhood major depression.
...
PMID:Neuroendocrine response to L-5-hydroxytryptophan challenge in prepubertal major depression. Depressed vs normal children. 144 21
The reports of the effect of calcitonin on pituitary function are confusing and often refer to uncontrolled studies. We have now carried out a double-blind placebo-controlled trial of intravenous and subcutaneous salmon calcitonin on anterior pituitary function in 17 healthy volunteers. Visual analogue scores for the nausea and vomiting seen after salmon calcitonin correlated with the rise in ACTH and, secondarily, cortisol. Calcitonin had no effect on growth hormone,
prolactin
, thyrotrophin, luteinizing hormone or follicle stimulating hormone. It is concluded that the stimulation of ACTH secretion following a single dose of salmon calcitonin is probably the result of the stress of
nausea
rather than a direct effect on the pituitary.
...
PMID:The effects on anterior pituitary hormone secretion of salmon calcitonin in healthy volunteers. 165 86
Bromocriptine is currently and successfully used for the treatment of pituitary prolactinomas. However, bromocriptine appears unable to normalize plasma
prolactin
levels in about 10% and to reduce tumour size in one-third of cases. The lack of normalization of plasma
prolactin
levels in spite of a daily dose of bromocriptine equal to or higher than 15 mg suggests a bromocriptine resistance. We compared the long-term effects of bromocriptine and CV 205-502 (a non-ergot derivative D2 dopamine agonist) on plasma
prolactin
levels and tumour size in seven bromocriptine-resistant prolactinomas. Bromocriptine reduced significantly (P less than 0.001) plasma
prolactin
levels (from 2307 +/- 518 to 568 +/- 279 micrograms/l) (conversion to Sl units: 1 microgram/l = 20 mU/l). Visual field defects observed in five patients improved in four. However, CT scan analysis showed a decrease in tumour size in only three patients. Except for transient and minor side-effects at the beginning of the treatment, CV 205-502 was well tolerated in five of seven patients. In the remaining two patients
nausea
and vertigo occurred with high dosages of CV 205-502 and it was necessary to reduce the daily dose. CV 205-502 lowered plasma
prolactin
to levels similar to those obtained after bromocriptine therapy in four cases. In the three remaining patients, CV 205-502 was more potent than bromocriptine as demonstrated by the further 90% reduction in plasma levels obtained in one case and by the normalization of plasma
prolactin
levels in the two other cases. One woman became pregnant during CV 205-502 treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of the new dopaminergic agonist CV 205-502 on plasma prolactin levels and tumour size in bromocriptine-resistant prolactinomas. 167 68
Ten male inpatients (aged 29 +/- 6 years) with a DSM-III diagnosis of schizophrenia participated in a 4-week open dose escalation study of amperozide, a novel 5-HT2 receptor antagonist. The maximum daily dose of amperozide was 20 mg. A close dose-plasma concentration relationship showed considerable interindividual variation in the steady-state plasma levels at a given dose. Approximately equal concentrations of amperozide and its metabolite, N-deethylated amperozide, were seen in plasma. The
prolactin
levels were not increased during amperozide treatment. No changes occurred in hematological or other laboratory parameters. ECG showed changes in T-wave morphology and a prolongation of the QTc time. One patient was withdrawn from the trial due to aggravation of psychotic symptoms, and two patients had a brief, temporary discontinuation of the drug due to somatic illness. Six patients were improved during amperozide treatment, as assessed by the Clinical Global Improvement Scale. Among the responders the total CPRS was reduced by a mean of 64% and total BPRS score by a mean of 46%. Mild tremor was a frequent side effect, but other extrapyramidal symptoms were rare.
Nausea
was seen in six patients and of a more pronounced character in one patient. In general, the severity of the side effects increased with increasing doses of amperozide.
...
PMID:Effects of amperozide in schizophrenia. An open study of a potent 5-HT2 receptor antagonist. 192 36
The aromatase inhibitor, 'pyridoglutethimide' (PyG), has been shown previously to suppress serum oestrogen levels in postmenopausal breast cancer patients and to achieve clinical responses at a dose of 500 mg twice daily (b.d.). This report gives the results of a detailed pharmacokinetic and endocrine study of PyG in ten patients. Four doses were tested at intervals of 2 weeks in the following order: 200 mg b.d., 400 mg b.d., 800 mg b.d., 1200 mg b.d. Concentration-time profiles of serum levels of PyG were curvilinear in all patients probably reflecting a saturation of metabolic enzymes. During repeat-dosing metabolism was enhanced approximately 2-fold. Plasma levels of oestradiol were significantly suppressed by the lowest dose of PyG. Although higher doses appeared to achieve greater suppression this was not statistically significant in this small group of patients. There were no significant effects at any dose on the serum levels of cortisol, aldosterone, luteinising hormone, follicle stimulating hormone,
prolactin
, sex hormone binding globulin or thyroid stimulating hormone. There was a dose-related increase in 17 alpha-hydroxyprogesterone levels and a dose-related decrease in levels of dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate (DHAS). The androgens DHA, testosterone and androstenedione also were significantly suppressed with at least one of the doses of PyG. Synacthen tests did not support these changes being a result of inhibition of 17,20 lyase. It is possible that they are due to enhanced clearance of DHAS. Two patients experienced no toxicity throughout the study, whilst a total of four patients were withdrawn because of side-effects: one at 400 mg b.d., two at 800 mg b.d., and one at 1200 mg b.d. The most frequent side-effects were
nausea
and lethargy. One patient showed an objective response to treatment.
...
PMID:Endocrine, pharmacokinetic and clinical studies of the aromatase inhibitor 3-ethyl-3-(4-pyridyl)piperidine-2,6-dione ('pyridoglutethimide') in postmenopausal breast cancer patients. 193 11
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