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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study undertaken to determine the suitability of oral contraceptive (o.c.) use for patients over 40 years of age is reported. Side effects during 2315 cycles of combination and sequential contraceptive use by women equal to or 25 are compared with 522 cycles of o.c. use by women equal to or 40. Combination preparations showed a lower incidence of loss of libido, leg pains, and
nausea
. Sequential preparations showed a lower incidence of fluor vaginalis, headaches and nervousness, and a tendency toward weight loss. Mikrogynon 30 was used during 683 cycles by 108 women equal to or 25 and 63 women equal to or 34.
Fatigue
, leg problems, and nervousness occurred more frequently among the older women, but they showed a lower incidence of bleeding irregularities during the first cycles and weight fluctuations. Older women had a higher discontinuation rate. 230 cycles of "step-up" method o.c. use among 34 women equal to or 25 years of age were compared to 143 cycles among 18 older women. These results are less conclusive, but there was a lower incidence of bleeding irregularities,
nausea
, and weight fluctuations among the older women. The highly publicized warning against o.c. use by women over 40 is found to be unfounded. The type of preparation used should be determined by the considerations of the individual case; preparations with low estrogen dosage show an increased incidence of
fatigue
, leg problems, nervousness, and bleeding irregularities among older women. The mortality among older women using o.c.s is 34 per million compared to 576 per million among pregnant women in that age group. Sterilization should be considered as an alternative to contraceptive use among women over 40.
...
PMID:[Contraceptives for women in their forties?]. 56 24
In a prospective study on digitalis intoxication, low serum magnesium was found in 90 patients, while 388 patients had values above 1.5 mEq/l. Hypomagnesemia was more frequent in women than in men, in those with low body weight and in those with advanced heart failure. More patients with hypomagnesemia than those without had
nausea
, anorexia,
fatigue
, flickering of vision and atrial tachycardia with block. Patients with hypomagnesemia also had lower serum potassium than normomagnesemic patients. There was, however, no significant difference in the prevalence of digitalis intoxication or in serum digitoxin concentration. Nor was there any correlation between serum digitoxin and serum magnesium levels.
...
PMID:Studies on digitalis. XIV. Is there any correlation between hypomagnesemia and digitalis intoxication? 59 44
In an open controlled multicenter study the effectiveness of various dose levels of (+)-Cyanidanol-3 (Catergen) in patients suffering from chronic liver disease and treated over a period of 6 months is assessed. Subjective symptoms as
fatigue
,
nausea
, loss of appetite, vomiting and pruritus are positively influenced at all dose levels. A statistically significant fall of the transaminases SGOT, SGPT and gamma--GT however occurs only at a dosage of 6 tablets per day (3000 mg per day) of (+)-Cyanidanol-3, which cannot be demonstrated at a dose level of 3 X 1 tablet per day. Between the dosage of 2 X 3 or 3 X 2 tablets per day is no significant difference. Side effects due to therapy could not be observed.
...
PMID:[A contribution as to the effect of (+)-Cyanidanol-3 in chronic liver disease (author's transl)]. 70 70
Fifteen epileptic patients with mild seizures of the narcolepsy type were treated with a combination of succinimide (average dose 750 mg) and dipropylacetate (average dose 1,200 mg), medication with each drug alone having brought no success. The combination of drugs stopped the seizures in eleven patients, in three they almost stopped and in one the frequency of seizures was halved. An E.E.G. was recorded in twelve, with improvement in each. Side effects occurred in five patients (
nausea
, vomiting, singultus and
fatigue
), but the drug had to be discontinued in only one instance.
...
PMID:[Treatment of atypical absences with a combination of succinimide and dipropylacetate (author's transl)]. 80 2
In 1148 cases the serum digoxin concentration (SDC) was correlated with the extracardiac signs of digitalis intoxication. There is a considerably overlap of SDC levels of patients with and without extracardiac signs of toxicity even though the mean SDC's of these two groups differ significantly. An increasing percentage of clinical intoxicated patients with increasing SDC levels was found at digoxin concentrations of 2.0 ng/ml and higher. At lower SDC levels patients with and without extracardiac signs of digitalis intoxication did not differ significantly in their mean SDC but in mean age and in mean creatinine concentration indicating that at least part of the symptoms in these patients might be due to a more severe illness. We could show that many of the extracardiac signs of digitalis intoxication are also seen in patients with impaired kidney function at low SDC levels and may lead to a wrong diagnosis. The most common complaint in patients with SDC's of 2.0 ng/ml and more is
nausea
(39.4%), followed by
tiredness
(30.4%), dizzyness (23.7%), vomiting (23.1%), headache (16.0%), visual disturbances (13,5%), colour (yellow) seeing (6;7%), diarrhea (4.2%) and severe neuro-psychiatric disturbances (3.8%). In patients with digitalis-induced arrhythmias the sequence of symptoms is the same only with a somewhat higher percentage rate. Only about one half of the patients with digitalis-induced arrhythmias and SDC values up to 2.5 ng/ml showed also extracardiac signs of intoxication. Therefore these signs are not to be taken as early symptoms of digitalis intoxication. Divided into subgroups (patients with/without digitalis-induced arrhythmias, patients with SDC values of more/less than 2.0 ng/ml) the patients with and without extracardiac signs of digitalis toxicity are compared with each other in regard to: mean body height and weight, concentration of digoxin, potassium and creatinine, digoxin dosage and mean age. The greatest differences were found between patients with combined cardiac and extracardiac signs of intoxication and patients with neither cardiac nor extracardiac signs of intoxication: These intoxicated patients are of significantly higher mean age and lower body weight, their mean concentration of digoxin and creatinine and the digoxin dosage administered are significantly greater, but there is no significant difference in potassium concentration. An important group of patients, namely the elderly with impaired kidney function, are especially prone to develop digitalis intoxication. In this group, however, the extracardial symptoms are of little benefit in the diagnosis of digitalis intoxication. In these patients rhythm disturbances and intoxication-like symptoms are frequently caused by other reasons. In most cases the SDC value can clarify the diagnosis without withdrawal of the drug.
...
PMID:[Digitalis intoxication: specifity and significance of cardiac and extracardiac symptoms. part II. Patients with extracardiac symptoms of digitalis intoxications (author's transl)]. 85 53
Thirty-two patients with the onset of erythema chronicum migrans, Lyme arthritis, or both in mid-1976 were studied prospectively. The skin lesion (24 patients) typically lasted about 3 weeks, beginning as a red macule or papule that expanded to form a large ring with central clearing. Associated symptoms ranged from none to malaise,
fatigue
, chills and fever, headache, stiff neck, backache, myalgias,
nausea
, vomiting, and sore throat. Three patients had been bitten by ticks at the site of the initial lesion 4 to 20 days before its onset. Nineteen patients suddenly developed a monoarticular or oligoarticular arthritis 4 days to 22 weeks (median, 4 weeks) after onset of the skin lesion; eight developed arthritis without a preceding skin lesion. Seven of these 27 experienced migratory joint pains. Arthritis attacks, most commonly in the knee, were typically short (median, 8 days) but sometimes persisted for months. Other manifestations included neurologic abnormalties, myocardial conduction abnormalities, serum cryoprecipitates, elevated serum IgM levels, and elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rates. The diagnostic marker is the skin lesion; without it, geographic clustering is the most important clue.
...
PMID:Erythema chronicum migrans and Lyme arthritis. The enlarging clinical spectrum. 86 48
Very fat people die earlier than people of normal weight because hypertension, diabetes and coronary disease are more frequent among the markedly obese. Most obese subjects, however, are only slightly overweight and their mortality is not elevated. Reasons for dieting are more often psychological than somatic. 2. Reducing diets are ineffective because the obese rarely follow them. Total fasting and intestinal bypass may provide better results, but are more dangerous. 3. Atkins' diet eliminates carbohydrates from food without restricting protein and fat intake. Deprived of carbohydrates, the body uses fat for fuel. A small part of metabolized fat is eliminated in the urine as ketone bodies, and this is why such diets are called "ketogenic". They have been known at least since 1863. 4. Caloric loss due to ketonuria does not exceed 100 Cal/day in the non-diabetic. It is maximal during total fasting and cannot be increased by a ketogenic diet. 5. In the short run, such diets produce rapid weight loss due to polyuria. On the other hand, refeeding carbohydrates causes water retention and weight gain. 6. The diet decreases appetite: patients eat less without feeling severe hunger and without measuring their food intake. 7. Orthostatic hypotension,
fatigue
, and
nausea
are frequent, despite what Dr. ATKINS claims. 8. The diet increases plasma cholesterol and uric acid. It may be dangerous in diabetes (anorexia, acidosis) and in heart or kidney failure (hypokalemia). 9. The diet, though far from good, is better than the book. ATKINS' theories are at best half-truths, and the results he claims lack credibility. The obese subject's disappointment with traditional reducing diets and the book's hard-sell style account for ATKINS' success.
...
PMID:[Dr. Atkins' dietetic revolution: a critique]. 89 45
The syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone is characterized by production of less than maximally dilute urine in the presence of hypotonic plasma. It may be secondary to malignant disease, central nervous system disorders, or pulmonary disease, among other conditions, or it may be idiopathic. Manifestations are those of water intoxication, eg, confusion,
fatigue
,
nausea
, headache, and neurologic signs. The pathogenesis is not completely understood. Restriction of fluid intake to obtain a negative water balance is effective treatment.
...
PMID:Inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone. An overview of the syndrome. 90 56
854 women received C49'249-Ba for contraceptive purposes over a total of 4478 cycles (average 5.3 cycles each patient). No pregnancies occurred during the treatment. 50% of the women tolerated the drug without any undesirable side effects. 8% of the women discontinued treatment because of negative side effects. 26 negative side effects were reported in 309 (36.6%) of the patients, in a total of 766 (17.1%) cycles. Amenorrhea was observed in 4.1% of the women in 1.3% of the cycles. 24.4% of the patients reported bleeding disorders. Other symptoms were
nausea
(7.4% of the cycles),
fatigue
(2.4%), headache (5.4%). Weight gains, elevated blood pressure, libido changes, and disorders in liver, blood coagulation, or lipid serum were slight. Most of these undesired side effects appeared in the early cycles of therapy and decreased or disappeared after continuation of the treatment. Pregnanediol tests showed that the contraceptive effect of C49'249-Ba occurs through changes in the cervix mucus membrane, endometrium as well as by means of ovulation inhibition. In spite of the low estrogen dose, this preparation offers reliable contraceptive protection.
...
PMID:[A review of international clinical experience with a low-oestrogen oral contraceptive (author's transl)]. 98 Nov 63
Preliminary results of this retrospective-prospective analysis of renal hypertension in 110 children indicate that hypertension may be secondary to a wide variety of acute progresive, and chronic renal diseases which may be either congenital or acquired. Affected children may be detected at any time from infancy through adolescence. Symptoms usually associated with acute glomerulonephritis (i.e., headache, swelling,
nausea
, vomiting, anorexia,
fatigue
, dizziness, and fever) occur in both acute and chronic renal diseases associated with hypertension. Headache and swelling are the most common symptoms in this series. Peripheral edema, rales, and increased heart size were found in between 10 and 25% of these children. Differential diagnosis may be approached by a consideration of causes of acute and chronic hypertension. The child with chronic renal disease usually presents with a long history of fatigability, poor growth, and pallor, and laboratory tests reveal elevation of the creatinine and BUN along with anemia, hypocalcemia, and hyperphosphatemia. In contrast, the child with acute renal disease and hypertension presents with a history of prior good health followed by the abrupt onset of signs and symptoms of renal disease; laboratory tests usually reveal modest elevations of creatinine and BUN, anemia is unusual, an abnormal urinalysis is common, and serum calcium and phosphorous levels are usually normal. Renovascular and asymmetric renal parenchymal disease represent uncommon but important conditions because surgery may be curative. Treatment may be surgical, medical, or combined. Surgical conditions include renal trauma, hydronephrosis, asymmetric renal disease, and renal arterial disease. Adequate blood pressure control without medication can be expected following surgery in instances of unilateral involvement with a normal contralateral kidney. Meticulous assessment of the contralateral kidney is needed to determine that it is normal. If surgery is unsuccessful or is not indicated, pharmacologic therapy is initiated with a stepwise regimen starting with the mildest agent (e.g., thiazides) and then adding additional antihypertensive drugs when adequate blood pressure control has not yet been achieved. The goal of therapy is the lowest, safest, tolerated blood pressure levels. Long-term, carefully designed studies of antihypertensive agents for children with renal hypertension are not available. The need for collection and critical analysis of data concerning the clinical course of children with renal hypertension is evident from a review of the literature and from the preliminary data presented in this series. The presentation of such information and a critique of outcome variables will provide a basis for program planning for affected children and improvement in patient care where indicated.
...
PMID:Renal hypertension in children. 99 44
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