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)

The safety, tolerance, and clinical effects of a home therapy regimen of recombinant human interleukin-2 (rIL-2) and interferon-alpha 2b (IFN-alpha 2b) self injected subcutaneously have been assessed in 35 patients with advanced cancer refractory to standard therapy. 52 treatment cycles were given, each consisting of a 2-day rIL-2 pulse of 9.0 million IU/m2 every 12 h, followed by 6 weeks of rIL-2 1.8 million IU/m2 twice daily for 5 days per week and of IFN-alpha 2b 5.0 million U/m2 thrice a week. The main adverse effects were fever, chills, nausea, anorexia, and hypotension and were limited to WHO grades of severity I and II in 29 of 35 patients. No treatment-related deaths occurred. The response rates among patients with renal-cell carcinoma were similar to those reported for high-dose intravenous regimens of interleukin-2 that are toxic and have to be given in hospital.
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PMID:Home therapy with recombinant interleukin-2 and interferon-alpha 2b in advanced human malignancies. 197 42

We present two patients with Hantaan virus infection, admitted to the Department of Nephrology, Skopje, at the same time, with the same clinical presentation (chills, fever, abdominal pain, hemorrhages, nausea, headache, proteinuria, hematuria, oliguria, acute renal failure) but with different pathohistological findings and different disease courses. In the first case diffuse proliferative glomerulonephritis was found, with a complete recovery of renal function after a month, with a mild proteinuria and erythruria during the second and the third month. In the second case, glomeruli were normal in general, with slight mesangial proliferation found in two out of twenty, but interstitial edema, lymphocyte infiltrations and tubular changes were noted. Complete recovery was not noted after 3 months of follow-up. The patient is now without hemodialysis treatment, with polyuria, in the stable phase of chronic renal failure which is not improving.
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PMID:Different pathohistological presentations of acute renal involvement in Hantaan virus infection: report of two cases. 198 98

A phase I trial of natural human beta-interferon (nHuIFN-beta) was initiated to evaluate its biological activity, maximum tolerated dose, and toxicity in patients with refractory malignancies. nHuIFN-beta was administered to successive groups of 4-6 patients as an i.v. bolus on days 1 and 4, for 4 consecutive weeks. Dose levels were 0.1, 1.0, 10, 30, 60, 100, and 200 x 10(6) units/m2. Thirty-five patients were entered, and 34 patients were evaluable for toxicity, immunomodulatory, and antitumor effects. Toxicity was mild to moderate and included fever and chills, fatigue, arthralgias, nausea, transient renal and hepatic dysfunction, and leukopenia. No dose-limiting toxicity was observed, and no responses were seen. Significant immunological changes included the following: an increase in natural killer activity on day 5 when compared to pretreatment values (P less than 0.01) and an increase in activated T-cells (CD3+/HLA-DR+) with increasing doses of nHuIFN-beta (P less than 0.01). Pharmacokinetic data demonstrated a short alpha half-life of 12.1 +/- 2.5 (SE) min and a beta half-life of 129.7 +/- 14.7 min. Neutralizing serum antibodies were detected in 2 of 27 patients receiving nHuIFN-beta. In conclusion, toxicity of nHuIFN-beta given twice weekly was moderate, and further dose escalation is possible. The immunological changes and pharmacokinetic behavior of nHuIFN-beta resemble those reported with rHuIFN-beta ser.
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PMID:Phase I trial of natural human interferon beta in metastatic malignancy. 198 23

In June 1983, an outbreak of waterborne giardiasis occurred in a group of 93 university students and faculty participating in a geology field course in Colorado. All cases occurred in one subgroup of persons who were heavily exposed to untreated stream water on a field trip, and the risk of illness was strongly related to the amount of untreated stream water consumed. The median incubation period from a brief exposure to the first symptom was 7 days. The authors compared symptoms and stool sample results among 31 Giardia-positive persons in the exposed group and 36 Giardia-negative participants in an unexposed group to assess several case definitions for acute giardiasis. Diarrhea, abdominal cramps, flatulence, foul-smelling stools, nausea, excessive tiredness, bloating, anorexia, and chills were each significantly more common in the first group than in the second. A giardiasis case definition of 5 days or more of diarrhea--the definition used in many epidemiologic studies of giardiasis--had a specificity of 100 percent but a sensitivity of only 32.2 percent compared with a definition based on results of stool examinations. When a case was defined as an illness lasting 7 days or more, with a combination of two or more of six symptoms (diarrhea, flatulence, foul-smelling stools, nausea, abdominal cramps, and excessive tiredness), sensitivity rose to 73 percent, with a specificity of 88 percent. Such a case definition may be an improvement over that of 5 days of diarrhea, especially in outbreaks where there is good laboratory documentation that Giardia is the etiologic agent. The definition should be validated in other outbreaks and in situations where giardiasis must be distinguished from gastrointestinal disease caused by other agents.
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PMID:Acute giardiasis: an improved clinical case definition for epidemiologic studies. 199 3

Bacterial infections transmitted by blood or blood products, although rare, remain a serious threat to the recipient of a transfusion. We report on five cases of adverse reactions due to bacterial contamination of blood products, and we review 76 similar cases reported in the English-language literature. Most cases (70%) have been reported from the United States. Various sources of contamination have been suggested, including infection in the donor and invasion of the blood product during the process of collection, preparation, and storage. Frequent clinical manifestations are fever (80%), chills (53%), hypotension (37%), and nausea or vomiting (26%). The overall mortality is 35% (28 of 81 patients). In 38 patients (47%) the adverse reactions have appeared during transfusion; in the others the interval between completion of the transfusion and appearance of symptoms has ranged from 15 minutes to 17 days. A wide spectrum of bacteria have been implicated as causes of adverse reactions, with Pseudomonas species involved in 28% of episodes. Many such reactions are probably misdiagnosed or overlooked, the result being underestimation of the extent of the problem.
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PMID:Transfusion reactions due to bacterial contamination of blood and blood products. 204 64

A 23-year-old male patient with bacteriologically proven pulmonary tuberculosis was treated with the various regimens of antituberculosis drugs for nearly 15 months. Rifampicin was administered thrice as one of the 3-4 drug regimen and each time he developed untoward side effects like nausea, vomiting and fever with chills and rigors. The last such episode was of acute renal failure at which stage the patient was seen by the authors of this report. The patient, however, made a full recovery.
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PMID:Acute renal failure due to rifampicin. 208 61

In this study we examined the clinical and laboratory findings of 80 in-patients. There is an important difference between sexes (p greater than 0.05). Comparison of ages showed that 7-30 age is more vulnerable than the older group. We found clinical symptoms of fever, chills, headache, abdominal pain, disturbances in bowel function, nausea, vomiting, anorexia, and lassitude in the first two weeks more frequently when compared with the 3rd, 4th, 5th weeks of illness (p less than 0.001). Where physical finding of rose spots, discordant pulse rate are important in the first two weeks (p less than 0.001). Abdominal discomfort is an important symptom both in the first two and in the last three weeks (% 40.3 and % 36 respectively). Hepatomegaly and splenomegaly, were found more frequently in the last three weeks. According to laboratory findings of anemia, leukopenia, increased erythrocyte sedimentation rate and positive blood and feces cultures there is no important difference between the first two and last three weeks (p greater than 0.05). Increase in polynuclear leucocytes is important for the first two weeks, and increase in lymphocytes is important in the last three weeks (p less than 0.001). Positivity of group agglutination tests is 57%, in the first two weeks and 83% in the last three weeks. This difference is found to be important.
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PMID:[Comparison of symptoms and clinical and laboratory findings in the first and last weeks of typhoid fever]. 208 33

In 11 patients with III A stage multiple myeloma in every week before new course of cytostatics started, three times plasmapheresis therapy had been performed. There was no difference in reducing of plasma cell mass, plasma immunoglobulins concentration and proteinuria or disappearance of osteolytic bone lesions between the group of patients treated with combination chemotherapy and plasmapheresis and chemotherapy alone. However there was visible disparity in the disappearance of bony pains: rapidly in the plasmapheresis group. One serious complication after plasmapheresis therapy was notified: gastric haemorrhage. The remaining plasmapheresis complications: tetany, nausea, vomiting, chills and bradycardia were related to citrate toxicity.
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PMID:[Combined therapy of multiple myeloma: cytostatics and plasmapheresis]. 213 16

Within one year three of 25 patients with rheumatoid arthritis treated with azathioprine 100 mg daily developed the following adverse reactions less than two weeks after starting treatment: patient one showed fever with chills, rash, and severe liver function abnormalities suggestive of cholestasis; the second patient had fever, nausea, diarrhoea, and moderately raised liver enzymes; the third patient showed very high fever and severe chills. In two patients the drug was rechallenged, with more rapidly arising and more severe symptoms. In one case raised liver enzymes persisted until seven months after discontinuation of azathioprine. Hypersensitivity reactions and hepatotoxicity of azathioprine are discussed.
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PMID:Azathioprine induced fever, chills, rash, and hepatotoxicity in rheumatoid arthritis. 213 7

We demonstrated the clinical effectiveness of recombinant interferon-gamma (rIFN gamma) (Biogen) in 18 patients with Philadelphia-positive chronic myeloid leukemia. Sequential cytogenetic studies and molecular analyses of the breakpoint cluster region and for immunoglobulin and T cell rearrangements were performed every 3-4 months. In 13 patients who received treatment for a minimum of 3 months, the majority were treated with 1.5 mg/m2, t.i.w., i.v. Nonhematologic effects--particularly chills, rigors, myalgia, fatigue, headaches, and nausea--were significant. Complete or partial hematologic responses were observed in six patients, two of whom had approximately 20% normal metaphases after an average of 74 weeks of treatment. However, reversion to 100% Ph+ cells occurred 30 weeks later. In these two patients, in whom normal metaphases were found, no changes were observed in the presence of rearrangements of the breakpoint cluster region. In addition, the marrows remained hypercellular, and the leukocyte alkaline phosphatase score and B12 levels remained abnormal. No immunoglobulin or T cell beta-chain gene rearrangements were found. These data indicate the clinical effectiveness of rIFN gamma in some patients with chronic myeloid leukemia, although the fundamental nature of the disease is unaltered by this form of treatment.
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PMID:Recombinant gamma-interferon has activity in chronic myeloid leukemia. 215 24


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