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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A retrospective chart review was conducted at two regional poison centers to determine the clinical outcome of boric acid ingestions and to assess the relationship between serum boric acid levels and clinical presentation. A total of 784 cases were studied; all but 2 were acute ingestions. No patients developed severe manifestations of toxicity, and 88.3% were entirely asymptomatic. The most common symptoms were vomiting, abdominal pain, and diarrhea. Lethargy, headache,
lightheadedness
, and atypical rash were seen less frequently. Boric acid levels were obtained in 51 patients and ranged from 0 to 340 micrograms/mL. Blood levels were 70 micrograms/mL or more in 7 patients; 4 remained asymptomatic, whereas the other 3 had
nausea
or vomiting. Dialysis was performed in 4 of these 7 patients, only 1 of whom had symptoms (vomiting). On the basis of data from 9 patients, the mean half-life of boric acid was determined to be 13.4 hours (range, 4.0 to 27.8). Hemodialysis in 3 patients significantly shortened the half-life compared with pre- and postdialysis half-lives. Our results suggest that acute boric acid ingestions produce minimal or no toxicity and that aggressive treatment is not necessary in most patients.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of toxicity in a series of 784 boric acid ingestions. 337 93
Despite much recent research, there is still little systematic information about the phenomenology of panic attacks, and their possible causes remain obscure. We investigated panic attacks in the natural environment using an event sampling approach. Twenty-seven panic attack patients and 19 matched normal controls kept panic attack and self-exposure diaries for 6 days and wore an ambulatory heart rate/physical activity recorder for 3 days. Patients reported 175 attacks, generally of moderate severity. The most frequent symptoms were palpitations, dizziness/
lightheadedness
, dyspnea,
nausea
, sweating, and chest pain/discomfort. The results did not support the classification of panic attacks recently proposed by Sheehan and Sheehan, which requires three symptoms as a cutoff for panic attacks. Panic attacks classified by the patients as situational (i.e., occurring in feared situations) were more severe and occurred in situational contexts different from spontaneous attacks, but were otherwise phenomenologically similar. Heart rates did not change during spontaneous attacks and were only mildly elevated during situational attacks or during the 15 minutes preceding these attacks. These heart rate changes were interpretable as effects of anxiety, although physical activity showed a similar pattern of changes. Some normal control subjects reported on the panic diary primarily situational anxiety episodes that were phenomenologically similar to, albeit less severe than, the patients' episodes. Panic patients may sometimes fail to perceive environmental triggers for their attacks because many attacks classified as spontaneous occurred in classical "phobic" situations. Furthermore, the comparison of concurrent diary and retrospective interview and questionnaire descriptions showed that panic patients have a tendency toward retrospective exaggeration. Implications for the assessment, definition, and classification of panic attacks are discussed.
...
PMID:Panic attacks in the natural environment. 365 82
Cardiac and noncardiac side effects were studied in 293 consecutive patients referred for nonexercise stress thallium imaging with intravenous dipyridamole. Six minutes after the initiation of infusion, there was a mean 9-beat/min increase in heart rate and a mean 12-mm Hg decrease in systolic blood pressure. The largest increase in heart rate exceeded 20 beats/min in only 13% of patients and the largest decrease in systolic blood pressure exceeded 20 mm Hg in 31%. Noncardiac side effects were headache (11%),
lightheadedness
or dizziness (5%) and
nausea
(4%). Only 9 patients required intravenous aminophylline for relief of noncardiac side effects: severe headache in 7 and
nausea
in 2. Cardiac side effects included chest pain in 76 patients (26%), of whom 70% were given aminophylline for relief of symptoms. Sixty patients (20%) had ischemic ST-segment depression and 56 (19%) had arrhythmias (ventricular in 50 and atrial in 6). There were no deaths, myocardial infarctions or sustained arrhythmias due to dipyridamole administration. Among 62 patients also undergoing cardiac catheterization, side effects except for arrhythmias were unrelated to the number of vessels with coronary artery disease. Intravenous dipyridamole is safe for nonexercise stress testing and has few serious side effects. However, the possibility of ischemia requires careful selection of patients and monitoring of vital signs and the electrocardiogram during the test.
...
PMID:Safety of intravenous dipyridamole for stress testing with thallium imaging. 381 27
Fluoxetine was compared to doxepin in geriatric out-patients with major depressive illness. At the end of the 6-week double-blind study, the mean endpoint scores for all rating scales were significantly improved over base-line in both treatment groups. A subsequent 48-week open-label study supported the finding that both drugs are efficacious for maintenance therapy in elderly depressed patients. Fluoxetine, which lacks anticholinergic effects and is nonsedating, was well-tolerated by most patients and had fewer total side effects than doxepin. Common drug-related side effects for fluoxetine included nervousness/anxiety and
nausea
. Common side effects of doxepin were dry mouth, drowsiness/sedation, constipation, and dizziness/
lightheadedness
.
...
PMID:Double-blind comparative trials of fluoxetine and doxepin in geriatric patients with major depressive disorder. 388 76
A double-blind, cross-over, randomized study of acute migraine attack compared treatment results of naproxen with that of placebo. Each treatment period continued for either three months or six migraine attacks, whichever occurred first. The initial dose of naproxen was 750 mg, with additional 250-500 mg doses taken if and when required, to a maximum of five 250 mg tablets within a period of 24 h in each migraine attack. Forty-one patients were enrolled in the study; they had all experienced at least two but not more than eight migraine attacks a month during the preceding year. Thirty-two patients completed the two treatment periods. Naproxen was statistically significantly superior to placebo in reducing the severity of head pain,
nausea
, and photophobia; in shortening the duration of head pain,
nausea
, vomiting, photophobia, and
lightheadedness
; in diminishing the frequency of vomiting; and in decreasing the need for escape medication. Both patient and physician treatment preferences significantly favoured naproxen. Nine side effects were experienced by seven patients while receiving placebo and seven by five patients during naproxen treatment. Mild gastrointestinal discomfort was the main complaint. Only one patient withdrew from treatment because of a side effect, which occurred while receiving placebo.
...
PMID:Treatment of acute migraine attack: naproxen and placebo compared. 389 30
Spirogermanium, a heavy metal compound in which germanium has been substituted in an azaspirane ring structure, was studied in 39 patients with advanced malignant neoplasms. Thirty-one patients were considered evaluable for toxic effects of spirogermanium. Transient neurological symptoms occurred in 12 patients (39%), including dizziness or
lightheadedness
, marked fatigue, visual blurring, ataxia, paresthesia, and
nausea
. These symptoms could be reduced by infusing the drug over 2 hours rather than over 1 hour. Persistent neurotoxicity in the form of partial loss of taste or extreme weakness was observed in three patients. No evidence of hematologic, renal, or hepatic toxicity was observed. Antitumor activity of spirogermanium was not identified in this group of heavily pretreated patients. Spirogermanium had limited and acceptable toxicity in utilizing a dose of 120 mg/m2 infused over 2 hours, three times weekly.
...
PMID:A phase II study of spirogermanium in advanced human malignancy. 390 6
The efficacy of safety of naproxen sodium and ergotamine tartrate were compared for the treatment of acute migraine attack in a randomized, parallel trial with 114 participating patients. At the start of symptoms, patients took either three tablets of naproxen sodium (275 mg each) or one of an ergotamine combination (containing 2 mg ergotamine tartrate, 91.5 mg caffeine, and 50 mg cyclizine chlorhydrate). Patients were followed for three months or until six attacks were monitored, whichever came first. Both medications substantially shortened the duration of migraine attacks and reduced the severity of symptoms. When the test medications were taken within 2 h of onset of attack, naproxen sodium was statistically significantly more effective than the ergotamine combination in reducing the severity of headache pain,
nausea
, and
lightheadedness
. The ergotamine combination was associated with significantly more vomiting, need for rescue medication, and side effects than was naproxen sodium. Four patients required discontinuation of the ergotamine combination and one of naproxen sodium. Both patients and investigators rated tolerance for naproxen sodium as superior to tolerance for the ergotamine combination. Naproxen sodium seems to be an effective and safe treatment for migraine attacks.
...
PMID:Acute migraine attack therapy: comparison of naproxen sodium and an ergotamine tartrate compound. 392 22
The antianginal efficacy of a transdermal therapeutic delivery system for nitroglycerin (TNG) was compared with that of placebo in a double-blind crossover study. Twenty-five patients with stable angina pectoris were evaluated. The transdermal system delivered 5 mg of nitroglycerin over a 24-hour period and was applied once every 48 hours. Treadmill exercise testing (Bruce protocol) was done 48 hours after the patch was applied in the first phase of the crossover and at the conclusion of the second phase of the crossover, 48 hours after the final dose of the second treatment. Exercise performance was significantly improved (P less than 0.05, analysis of covariance) with TNG as compared with placebo, as were frequency of episodes of angina and nitroglycerin consumption (P less than 0.05, analysis of variance). The incidence of mild-to-moderate headache in patients was greater during treatment with TNG (20%) than during placebo treatment (6.7%). Four cases of mild transient dermatitis and occasional reports of dizziness,
lightheadedness
, and
nausea
were noted.
...
PMID:Sustained effects of transdermal nitroglycerin in patients with angina pectoris. 393 13
We questioned 113 patients with subsequently diagnosed sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT) regarding the symptoms that prompted their seeking hospital treatment, eliciting the following: 15% of patients had lost consciousness, 15% had near syncope, 35% had mild
lightheadedness
and 35% had no cerebral symptoms. Patients with preexisting congestive heart failure or a VT rate of 200 beats per minute or greater more often lost consciousness. Other symptoms included palpitations in 57% of patients, chest pain in 27%, dyspnea in 25%, weakness in 6%,
nausea
or diaphoresis in 3% each and flushing in 2%. In approximately 50% of patients who had mild
lightheadedness
or no cerebral symptoms, their condition was incorrectly diagnosed as supraventricular tachycardia based on the absence of severe symptoms during the tachycardia. In some patients, VT may be associated with mild or atypical symptoms. The differentiation of supraventricular from ventricular tachycardia should be based on electrocardiographic criteria and should not be influenced by the nature or severity of a patient's symptoms. The severity of cerebral symptoms is at least partially related to the VT rate and a patient's underlying heart disease.
...
PMID:Clinical symptoms in patients with sustained ventricular tachycardia. 399 9
One hundred women with moderate-to-very-severe prepartum pain participated in a double-blind study of intravenously injected butorphanol and meperidine that compared the analgesic properties, effect on the process of labor, condition of the newborn and the incidence of side effects associated with the two drugs. Cervical dilation, infant birth weight and Apgar scores were not significantly different between the test groups. The mean fetal heart rate for the butorphanol group was significantly faster than that of the meperidine group. Butorphanol provided significantly more analgesia than meperidine at 30 minutes and one hour after administration, based on pain intensity and pain relief scores. Some side effects, including sedation, dizziness,
lightheadedness
,
nausea
, vomiting and pain at the injection site, were reported for both drugs.
...
PMID:Double-blind comparison of intravenously injected butorphanol and meperidine in parturients. 611 May 84
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