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Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 44-year-old man with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) who suffered adverse effects from treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (TMP-SMX) and was then treated with pentamidine isethionate is described, and approved and investigational drugs used in the management of PCP in the AIDS patient are discussed. After taking TMP-SMX, 240 mg trimethoprim and 1200 mg sulfamethoxazole, four times a day orally for 10 days at home, the patient was hospitalized complaining of
nausea
, vomiting, diarrhea, and fever. Intravenous TMP-SMX was begun at a dosage of 18 mg/kg/day of trimethoprim. Four days later, his condition had deteriorated and he had elevations of liver enzymes and a decrease in white blood cell (WBC) count. TMP-SMX was discontinued and pentamidine isethionate was started at a dosage of 4 mg/kg/day i.v. His symptoms and fever subsided and his liver enzyme levels and WBC count improved. After nine days of pentamidine his WBC count decreased; pentamidine was suspected as the cause and discontinued; no further therapy was needed. PCP was the initial infection that established this patient's diagnosis of AIDS. The patient did not have exertional dyspnea and nonproductive cough, which are usually seen in AIDS patients with PCP. TMP-SMX 20 mg/kg/day, based on the trimethoprim content, is the usual initial treatment for PCP. Adverse effects of TMP-SMX develop more frequently in AIDS patients than in non-AIDS patients with PCP. The recommended dose of pentamidine isethionate for the treatment of PCP is 4 mg/kg/day, im. or i.v. A few studies have shown good response to aerosolized pentamidine. Trials of investigational agents have excluded patients with severely compromised respiratory status; eflornithine, dapsone in combination with trimethoprim, and trimetrexate have been used. Corticosteroids should be considered a last effort until additional data are available. TMP-SMX may be used to prevent recurrence of PCP or to prevent the initial occurrence of PCP in AIDS patients. Intravenous or aerosol doses of pentamidine may be effective as prophylaxis.
Sulfadoxine
-pyrimethamine tried as prophylaxis produced adverse reactions. Despite its higher incidence of serious adverse effects in the AIDS population, TMP-SMX is considered preferable to pentamidine for initial therapy. Pentamidine is preferred for patients with documented allergy to TMP-SMX or failure to respond to a five- to seven-day course of TMP-SMX.
...
PMID:Treatment of Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia in patients with AIDS. 313 63
The toxicities of antimalarial drugs vary because of the differences in the chemical structures of these compounds. Quinine, the oldest antimalarial, has been used for 300 years. Of the 200 to 300 compounds synthesised since the first synthetic antimalarial, primaquine in 1926, 15 to 20 are currently used for malaria treatment, most of which are quinoline derivatives. Quinoline derivatives, particularly quinine and chloroquine, are highly toxic in overdose. The toxic effects are related to their quinidine-like actions on the heart and include circulatory arrest, cardiogenic shock, conduction disturbances and ventricular arrhythmias. Additional clinical features are obnubilation, coma, convulsions, respiratory depression. Blindness is a frequent complication in quinine overdose. Hypokalaemia is consistently present, although apparently self-correcting, in severe chloroquine poisoning and is a good index of severity. Recent toxicokinetic studies of quinine and chloroquine showed good correlations between dose ingested, serum concentrations and clinical features, and confirmed the inefficacy of haemodialysis, haemoperfusion and peritoneal dialysis for enhancing drug removal. The other quinoline derivatives appear to be less toxic. Amodiaquine may induce side effects such as gastrointestinal symptoms, agranulocytosis and hepatitis. The main feature of primaquine overdose is methaemoglobinaemia. No cases of mefloquine and piperaquine overdose have been reported. Overdose with quinacrine, an acridine derivative, may result in
nausea
, vomiting, confusion, convulsion and acute psychosis. The dehydrofolate reductase inhibitors used in malaria treatment are sulfadoxine, dapsone, proguanil (chloroguanide), trimethoprim and pyrimethamine. Most of these drugs are given in combination. Proguanil is one of the safest antimalarials. Convulsion, coma and blindness have been reported in pyrimethamine overdose.
Sulfadoxine
can induce Lyell and Stevens-Johnson syndromes. The main feature of dapsone poisoning is severe methaemoglobinaemia which is related to dapsone and to its metabolites. Recent toxicokinetic studies confirmed the efficacy of oral activated charcoal, haemodialysis and haemoperfusion in enhancing removal of dapsone and its metabolites. No overdose has been reported with artemesinine, a new antimalarial tested in the People's Republic of China. The general management of antimalarial overdose include gastric lavage and symptomatic treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical features and management of poisoning due to antimalarial drugs. 330 66
Mefloquine was compared with sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine for safety and efficacy in a randomized, double-blind clinical trial in adult males from a malaria-endemic area of Brazil. A total of 99 oligosymptomatic and symptomatic volunteers with Plasmodium falciparum parasitaemia took part in the trial; 49 were given 1000 mg of mefloquine and the remainder received 1500 mg of sulfadoxine plus 75 mg of pyrimethamine, in a single oral dose.Mefloquine was 100% successful in clearing parasitaemia within 7 days; there were no recrudescences.
Sulfadoxine
-pyrimethamine was less successful; 35 cases showed an S-type response, 8 an RI response, 3 an RII, and 2 an RIII response. The side-effects of mefloquine were mild and transient and included headache,
nausea
, vomiting, dizziness, and diarrhoea. A satisfactory weight gain and rise in haemoglobin level were seen in both groups.
...
PMID:A phase II clinical trial of mefloquine in Brazilian male subjects. 636 Apr 1