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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Iloprost
, a stable carbaprostacyclin analog, was infused (up to 2-4 ng/kg/min) for 12 h daily on 5 consecutive days into the forearm vein of 13 patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease (PAOD) of legs (stages IIb-III). All vasodilatory and antiplatelet drugs were stopped three weeks earlier. For comparison, dextran was infused in a randomized, crossover, double-blind manner with an average interval of 3 months.
Iloprost
increased significantly ankle systolic pressure and ankle/arm pressure ratio for the follow-up period of one month. Foot skin temperature increased insignificantly. Pain-free walking distance was prolonged up to 1.51 times by iloprost and 1.14 times by dextran (p less than 0.05). Venous occlusion plethysmography showed no improvement in the blood flow of legs. Eight patients experienced a subjective improvement in their clinical status with iloprost. Ten patients suffered from mild to severe headache,
nausea
, transient rest pain of legs, and hypotension. One patient with gastric ulcer history was withdrawn because of mild hematemesis, not definitely drug-related. No significant changes occurred in standard laboratory safety control or in hemostasis. The results suggest that a 5-day iloprost infusion exerts a mild favourable effect on patients with PAOD.
...
PMID:A randomized, double-blind, crossover comparison of iloprost with dextran in patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease. 169 31
In 14 patients with acute myocardial infarction, a 24-hour
Iloprost
infusion was started with a mean delay of 309 +/- 22 minutes from onset of symptoms. Patients were haemodynamically monitored with a pulmonary artery catheter and an arterial cannula. The dose of
Iloprost
was 1-4 ng kg-1 min-1 and titrated according to blood pressure and systemic vascular resistance. When 2.0-4.0 ng kg-1 min-1 of
Iloprost
were infused, 5 out of 10 patients required dose reduction due to hypotension,
nausea
or both. However, in all patients the infusion period was completed as planned. Acute reductions of systolic blood pressure and vascular resistance were seen, whereas stroke volume increased and heart rate remained unchanged. The infusion of
Iloprost
caused profound inhibition of ADP-induced platelet aggregation but no significant changes in plasma values for platelet-specific proteins or thromboxane B2 were recorded. It is concluded that it was possible to safely administer
Iloprost
over 24 hours in the early phase of acute myocardial infarction and profound anti-aggregatory effects were observed. These findings should be evaluated in a controlled study.
...
PMID:Central haemodynamic and antiplatelet effects of iloprost--a new prostacyclin analogue--in acute myocardial infarction in man. 244 Jun 82
The plasma levels and excretion of tritium-labeled iloprost in healthy elderly male and female volunteers have been measured after i.v. infusion of 2 ng X kg-1 X min-1 for 4 h and oral administration of 0.1 and 0.48 microgram/kg. During infusion, a steady-state of labeled compounds in the plasma was not achieved. Total radioactivity declined from a mean of 408 pg equiv/ml in three phases, with half-lives of 24 min, 1.7 h and 5.0 h, respectively. A steady-state of unchanged iloprost was reached rapidly with a peak of 81 pg/ml. Plasma levels declined biphasically with half-lives of 6 min and 31 min. Total clearance was 24 ml X min-1 X kg-1. Maximum concentrations of labeled substances after oral administration were 307 and 1,051 pg equiv/ml after 29 and 39 min, respectively. The peak of unchanged iloprost (116 pg/ml) was observed 7.5 min after an oral dose of 0.48 microgram/kg. Bioavailability was 16%.
Iloprost
was totally metabolized and the metabolites were mainly excreted in urine. The main biotransformation products in plasma and urine were tentatively identified by cochromatography as dinor- and tetranoriloprost and their glucuronides. ADP-induced platelet aggregation was reduced by 60% during the i.v. infusion and 15 min after oral administration of 0.48 microgram/kg. Heart rate and blood pressure were virtually unaffected. Common side-effects were facial flush, headache and
nausea
.
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of radio-labeled iloprost in elderly volunteers. 244 64
Iloprost
, a stable prostacyclin analogue, was given by intravenous infusion to 29 patients with severe Raynaud's phenomenon, 26 of whom had systemic sclerosis (SS), and compared with placebo infusion in a double blind crossover trial.
Iloprost
significantly lessened the number and the severity of attacks compared with placebo. Nine patients expressed a preference for effectiveness of treatment, eight of these in favour of
Iloprost
. Thermography failed to show any long term effect of
Iloprost
. Side effects of headache, flushing,
nausea
, and vomiting were common, and the inconvenience of intravenous administration may limit its routine use.
...
PMID:Infusion of iloprost, a prostacyclin analogue, for treatment of Raynaud's phenomenon in systemic sclerosis. 244 71
The effectiveness of iloprost, a prostacyclin derivative, was assessed in a placebo-controlled multicentre trial on 101 patients with chronic arterial disease, stage IV. All patients were on a basic local treatment, 53 randomly being assigned to the iloprost group, 48 to the placebo one. Both groups received identical saline infusions, one with the other without iloprost. Infusions were given on 28 consecutive days, iloprost being added at a dose of up to 2 ng/kg.min over six hours. At the end of the treatment period, 32 of 52 patients (61.5%) of the iloprost group and eight of the 47 in the placebo group (17%) had partial or complete healing of ulcers (P less than 0.05), the treatment effect persisting in both groups for a mean duration of at least one year.
Iloprost
was well tolerated, once individual dosages had been appropriately adjusted. Facial flushes, headache and
nausea
were the most common side effects. Heart rate and blood-pressure variations did not differ between the two groups.
...
PMID:[Iloprost, a stable prostacyclin derivative, in stage 4 arterial occlusive disease. A placebo-controlled multicenter study]. 247 May 69
Iloprost
is a chemically stable derivative of carbaprostacyclin. We studied its hemodynamic effects in 10 patients in an intensive care unit.
Iloprost
was infused intravenously for 3 days for the treatment of advanced obliterative arterial disease of the lower extremities. Clinically significant hemodynamic responses were obtained with an infusion rate of 0.5 ng/kg/min. All subjects tolerated the dose of 4 ng/kg/min, which increased heart rate an average of 11% and cardiac index an average of 26%. This infusion rate decreased mean arterial pressure by 15%, total peripheral resistance by 31%, and pulmonary vascular resistance by 34%. Mean pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, left and right ventricular stroke work indices, and rate pressure product did not change. At higher doses of up to 8 ng/kg/min, responses were augmented only slightly, but side effects such as headache,
nausea
, and abdominal colics became more prominent. The data show iloprost to be a potent vasodilator that reduces both pre- and afterload and presumably induces a compensatory increase in cardiac output and heart rate, but does not increase the work load or oxygen demand of the heart.
...
PMID:Hemodynamic effects of iloprost, a prostacyclin analog. 620 78
Iloprost
is a synthetic stable analogue of prostacyclin (PGI2), which shares its antiaggregating and vasodilating properties.
Iloprost
has been administered by i.v. route to patients with critical limb ischaemia (CLI) of different origin (maximal dosage: 2 ng/kg/min 6 hours/day infusion for 14-28 days). In patients with claudicatio intermittens (Fontaine stage II) iloprost improved the time to claudication and the maximal walking distance on treadmill, with an effect still lasting 60 days after suspension. This benefit was not related to a significant improvement in blood flow. Five multicentric, perspective, randomized versus placebo studies in patients with more severe CLI (Fontaine stage III-IV) susceptible to surgical treatment, showed that iloprost was able to reduce pain and ulcer dimensions. Furthermore, tha amputation rate of the ischemic limb was significantly lower in patients treated with iloprost during a 6 month follow-up (p < 0.01).
Iloprost
was also more effective than aspirin in causing pain relief and ulcer healing in patients with thromboangiitis obliterans and more effective than nifedipine in reducing frequency, intensity and duration of ischemic episodes in patients with Raynaud's phenomenon. Minor side effects of iloprost administration are represented by facial flushing, tachycardia, headache,
nausea
, vomiting, abdominal cramping, diarrhoea, whose frequency ranges from 16% to 70%; major collateral effects, occurring in less than 5% of patients, are above all represented by severe hypotension and angina pectoris. Clinical data indicate therefore that iloprost treatment can allow to improve the clinical conditions and the prognosis in patients with critical ischemia of the limbs, not candidate to surgical revascularization, by causing a relief of pain, a reduction in ulcer dimensions and deferring amputation.
...
PMID:[The role of iloprost in the treatment of critical ischemia of the limbs]. 750 14
Twelve patients with systemic sclerosis were treated with intravenous infusions of the prostacyclin-stable analogue iloprost 0.5-2.0 ng/kg/min for 6 h from 8 to 13 days. Imminent gangrene was stopped in 2 patients and followed by healing. In 4 of 6 patients iloprost led to complete healing of ischaemic ulcers and in the remaining 2 patients to partial healing. One patient with severe Raynaud's phenomenon discontinued the study after 3 days due to severe headache. The 2 remaining patients with Raynaud's phenomenon as an indication improved, while no improvement was recorded in a patient with vasculitis of the lower leg. Side-effects such as headache,
nausea
and flushing were the reason that only 5 patients reached the maximum infusion rate. No statistical differences were recorded in digital bloodflow before and after the study or in plasma endothelin in the 9 patients investigated. Three of the 6 patients with healing ulcers, however, showed a pronounced decrease in plasma endothelin.
Iloprost
appears useful as a treatment of imminent gangrene and ischaemic ulcers in systemic sclerosis. This reparatory capacity could also be of a more general importance in therapy of this disease.
...
PMID:Treatment of ischaemic digital ulcers and prevention of gangrene with intravenous iloprost in systemic sclerosis. 880 Mar 8
The aminothiols exemplified by WR-2721 are effective radioprotectors; however, their toxicity associated with hypotension,
nausea
, and emesis has limited their development for applications to medicine or in harzardous radiation environments. There is a need for new radioprotectors that have fewer toxic side effects when given alone or combined with reduced amounts of thiols. A variety of prostaglandins (PGs) have been shown to be radioprotective agents and some appear to have fewer toxic side effects than the aminothiols.
Iloprost
, a stable PGI, analog protects the clonogenic epithelial cells of intestinal crypts but does not protect epithelial cells of the villi. In contrast, an E-series omega chain diene analog designated SC-44932 protects epithelial cells of both crypts and villi. When the two are combined, protection of the crypts is additive and the villi are protected to the same degree as when SC-44932 is given alone. Since radioprotection for some PGs has been shown to be dependent upon receptors, we suggest that the pattern of radioprotection seen with these two analogs depend on the location of the respective receptors or on the ability of differentiated villus cells to respond to PGs. By studying different analogs, we hope to identify mechanisms associated with PG-induced radioprotection and to identify the most protective PG analogs for applications of radioprotection.
...
PMID:Prostaglandin-induced radioprotection of murine intestinal crypts and villi by a PGE diene analog (SC-44932) and a PGI analog (iloprost). 1153 15
In a randomized cross-over study, the effect of PGE(1) and iloprost on microcirculation as well as the tolerability was investigated in 36 patients with peripheral arterial occlusive disease stage III and IV according to Fontaine. Patients received PGE(1) and iloprost by single 3-h i.v. infusions on two different days at doses recommended by the manufacturers or in previous studies (PGE(1): first hour 20 microg, next 2h 30 microg each.
Iloprost
: first hour 0.5 ng/kg/min, next 2h 1.0 ng/kg/min). Transcutaneous oxygen pressure (tcPO(2)) values increased much more with PGE(1). Median tcPO(2) increase over baseline 30 min after the end of infusion was 9 and 2 mmHg for PGE(1) and iloprost, respectively, corresponding to median AUC differences from baseline of 1050 and 210 min mmHg. Because of its exploratory character, the study was not powered to test for significance. Adverse effects occurred in 19.4% (PGE(1)) and 30.6% (iloprost) of patients. Dose reduction was required in 3 patients receiving iloprost (hypotension,
nausea
, irritation of the infused vein), and in none receiving PGE(1).
...
PMID:Microcirculation and tolerability following i.v. infusion of PGE1 and iloprost: a randomized cross-over study in patients with critical limb ischemia. 1512 Jul 13
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