Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0027497 (
nausea
)
23,468
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this study consisted in following-up the biological and clinical parameters in HIV infected patients treated with tacrine (THA). THA (150-300 mg/d) was administrated to 70 patients (39 IVC I and 31 IVC II and III). Thirty-five were treated after discontinuation of
AZT
treatment and 35 as a first intention treatment. Thirty (43%) patients showed an increase in the CD4+ cell count by more than 50% relative to pretreatment levels and fifteen (21%) showed an increase of more than 25%. p24 antigenemia (Ag p24) became negative in eight of the twenty-seven patients who were initially positive, and decreased by 25 and 50% in nine and six patients, respectively. Ag p24 was therefore decreased in 80% of the patients. From a clinical point of view, there were two deaths (3%) and five opportunistic infections (7%). The treatment with THA was stopped in five patients because of side effects (
nausea
, rash). Neither hepatotoxicity, hematotoxicity, nor pancreatitis was observed during the THA treatment. In group II and III only two patients (6%) developed an opportunistic infection.
...
PMID:Open trial of tacrine therapy in 70 HIV-infected patients. 135 32
It is proposed that the new American and European AIDS epidemics are caused by recreational and anti-HIV drugs rather than by human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Chronologically, the AIDS epidemic in the 1980s followed a massive escalation in the consumption of recreational drugs that started in the 1960s and 70s. Epidemiologically, both epidemics derive about 80% of their victims from the same groups of 20-44 year-olds, of which 90% are males. In America 32% of these are intravenous drug users and their children, about 60% are male homosexuals who are long-term users of oral aphrodisiac drugs and an unknown percentage are prescribed the cytotoxic DNA chain terminator
AZT
, as inhibitor of HIV. Direct evidence indicates that these drugs are necessary for HIV-positives and sufficient for HIV-negatives to develop AIDS diseases. The drug-AIDS hypothesis predicts correctly that: (i) AIDS is new in the US, because the drug epidemic is new, while the HIV epidemic is old--fixed at a constant 1 million Americans since 1985; (ii) despite an increase in venereal diseases, AIDS remains restricted to long-term drug users and small groups with clinical deficiencies; (iii) over 72% of AIDS occurs in 20-44 year-old males, because they make up over 80% of hard psychoactive drug use; (iv) distinct AIDS diseases correlate with the use of distinct drugs, eg Kaposi's sarcoma with nitrite inhalants, tuberculosis with intravenous drugs, and leukopenia, anemia, and
nausea
with
AZT
; (v) AIDS diseases are only acquired after long-term drug consumption, rather than after single contacts as the virus-hypothesis predicts. The drug hypothesis can be tested epidemiologically and experimentally in animals. It predicts that most AIDS can be prevented by stopping the consumption of drugs, and provides a rational basis for therapy.
...
PMID:The role of drugs in the origin of AIDS. 142 Oct 32
In eight (25%) of 32 consecutive AIDS patients between 1986 and 1989, Mycobacterium avium infection was diagnosed: in seven disseminated, in one as a local lymph node process. Six patients were treated as consistently as possible with a combination of ethambutol, rifabutine, clofazimine and protionamide (or cycloserine) in relatively large dosages. Median survival of treated patients was 15.5 (4-22) months. Protionamide inhibited most M. avium strains (7 of 8) in vitro, but often caused intolerance (
nausea
). Treatment of disseminated cytomegalovirus infection in our opinion was necessary in 5 of 6 patients during longterm M. avium therapy. HIV therapy (
Zidovudine
) during M. avium treatment was not possible due to bone marrow depression. A low maintenance dose of corticosteroids was necessary in 3 of 6 patients (one with adrenal insufficiency) to suppress symptoms such as fever and malaise.
...
PMID:[Mycobacterium avium disease in AIDS patients; diagnosis and therapy]. 175 16
30 patients with HIV infection were enrolled to evaluate the clinical efficacy and toxicity of zidovudine (
AZT
), 0.5 g/day p.o. (Group A) vs.
AZT
0.5 g/day p.o. plus intravenous immunoglobulins (IVIG), 0.4 g/kg of body weight for three consecutive days, followed by one treatment of 0.6 g/kg of body weight every fourth week (Group B), over a period of one year. The study was open and randomized. The treatment groups were compared using the following study variables: 1) type of infections, recurrences and severity; 2) change in CD4+ T and CD8+ T cell count; 3) change in platelet count; 4) change in TNF alpha serum levels; 5) the probability of not developing an opportunistic infection over a period of 12 months. Patients from Group B developed less pathological events in comparison to Group A. No significative differences were evident with regard to values of T cell subsets obtained before and after treatment in each group and between the two groups. On the contrary, in 12 out of 15 patients from Group B there was a significant increase in platelet count. In both groups there was a significant decrease of mean serum levels of TNF alpha when a comparison was made between time 12 vs. time 6. However, when data were expressed as single values, in three subjects from Group B TNF alpha was still detectable by time 12 vs. 9 individuals in Group A. The cumulative probabilities of developing an opportunistic infection over the 12 months of treatment in the Group A subjects were significantly higher than in the Group B subjects (p less than 0.01). Adverse effects--
nausea
and gastric pain--were reported for 3 individuals (20%) from Group A and 4 patients (26%) from Group B. In conclusion, patients treated with
AZT
are especially likely to benefit from IVIG prophylaxis.
...
PMID:Clinical and immunologic effects of combination therapy with intravenous immunoglobulins and AZT in HIV-infected patients. 194 58
Zidovudine
(
AZT
) is a potent inhibitor of the replication of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and it has been shown to improve survival in advanced HIV disease. We conducted a randomized, double-blind trial in adults with asymptomatic HIV infection who had CD4+ cell counts of fewer than 500 per cubic millimeter on entry into the study. The subjects (92 percent male) were randomly assigned to one of three treatment groups: placebo (428 subjects); zidovudine, 500 mg per day (453); or zidovudine, 1500 mg per day (457). After a mean follow-up of 55 weeks (range, 19 to 107), 33 of the subjects assigned to placebo had the acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), as compared with 11 of those assigned to receive 500 mg of zidovudine (P = 0.002; relative risk, 2.8; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.4 to 5.6) and 14 of those assigned to receive 1500 mg of zidovudine (P = 0.05; relative risk, 1.9; 95 percent confidence interval, 1.0 to 3.5). In the three treatment groups, the rates of progression (per 100 person-years) to either AIDS or advanced AIDS-related complex were 7.6, 3.6, and 4.3, respectively. As compared with those assigned to placebo, the subjects in the zidovudine groups had significant increases in the number of CD4+ cells and significant declines in p24 antigen levels. In the 1500-mg zidovudine group, severe hematologic toxicity (anemia or neutropenia) was more frequent than in the other groups (P less than 0.0001). In the 500-mg zidovudine group,
nausea
was the only toxicity that was significantly more frequent (in 3.3 percent) than in the placebo group (P = 0.001). We conclude that zidovudine is safe and effective in persons with asymptomatic HIV infection and fewer than 500 CD4+ cells per cubic millimeter. Additional study will be required to determine whether such treatment will ultimately improve survival for persons infected with HIV.
...
PMID:Zidovudine in asymptomatic human immunodeficiency virus infection. A controlled trial in persons with fewer than 500 CD4-positive cells per cubic millimeter. The AIDS Clinical Trials Group of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. 238 74
To determine the compliance and tolerance with zidovudine (azidothymidine or
AZT
) therapy among poor, minority, and intravenous drug-using patients, data were collected on all AIDS and ARC patients followed for at least 4 weeks in a New York City Human Immunodeficiency Virus clinic. Ninety-nine patients received zidovudine, of whom 75% were males, 92% were minorities, and 59% had a history of intravenous drug use. Of the 99 patients, 72 had AIDS and 27 had ARC with T-helper (CD4) lymphocytes less than or equal to 500 mm3. Eighty-seven of the 99 patients (88%) were compliant with zidovudine therapy. Fifty-seven percent of these had at least one adverse drug reaction requiring dose reduction (44%) or cessation (13%). Adverse reactions were similar to those reported in other populations with HIV-related illness, although headache and
nausea
were less common. Twenty opportunistic infections (OIs) or HIV-related malignancies occurred in 15 of 82 (18%) patients who were on zidovudine for at least 4 weeks (7.6 OIs/1,000 patient weeks). Seven of the 82 died (9%), compared to 9 of the 17 patients (53%) who did not complete 4 weeks of zidovudine therapy (p less than 0.05). There were no significant differences in any of these measures when intravenous drug users were compared with other risk groups. We conclude that zidovudine can be administered to intravenous drug users and others in an inner city clinic with acceptable compliance and tolerance.
...
PMID:Zidovudine therapy in an inner city population. 238 64
Zidovudine
(azidothymidine) is a thymidine analogue antiretroviral drug active against human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). In acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) and AIDS-related complex (ARC) patients, orally and intravenously administered zidovudine is effective in reducing the incidence of opportunistic infections and neoplasms, increasing helper T lymphocyte numbers, and improving survival rates and quality of life. Adverse effects include serious haematological abnormalities and severe headache, abdominal discomfort,
nausea
, myalgia and insomnia. In addition, neutropenia and other anaemias frequently limit zidovudine therapy and may result in a need for multiple blood transfusions, dose reductions or withdrawal of the drug. However, despite these problems and the lack of information about some aspects of zidovudine use, zidovudine provides a major hope for HIV-infected patients, and it has rapidly become the standard therapy for improving the quality and duration of the lives of AIDS and ARC patients.
...
PMID:Zidovudine. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties, and therapeutic efficacy. 266 Nov 94
Zidovudine
(3'-azido-3'deoxythymidine,
AZT
, Retrovir) is the first antiretroviral drug to demonstrate clinical efficacy for symptomatic human immunodeficiency virus infection. In a large, placebo-controlled trial,
nausea
and hematologic toxicity, but not fever, occurred more frequently in zidovudine- than in placebo-treated patients. However, in an open label study, fever severe enough to halt zidovudine administration occurred in 10% of 70 acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) patients receiving the drug. We now describe three AIDS patients with severe zidovudine-induced fever in whom other causes of fever were excluded.
Zidovudine
-induced fever was confirmed in each case by drug rechallenge. Using an enzyme immunoassay, we detected IgM antibodies directed against a zidovudine-serum protein conformational determinant in one of these three patients. Neither IgG nor IgM anti-zidovudine antibodies were present in sera from the other two patients with zidovudine fever, from four AIDS patients who discontinued zidovudine for reasons other than fever, or from five AIDS patients who never received zidovudine.
Zidovudine
may cause fever as a severe adverse effect in patients with AIDS. Either type III or type IV hypersensitivity may mediate this reaction.
...
PMID:Zidovudine-induced fever. 266 40
Zidovudine
delays the progression of infection and prolongs the survival of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-infected patients, but these benefits are limited by dose-related toxicity and the cost of the drug. Dipyridamole, in micromolar concentrations, acts synergistically with zidovudine, reducing the anti-HIV 95% inhibitory concentration of zidovudine 5- to 10-fold in vitro. We sought to establish a well-tolerated dose of dipyridamole for use in combination with zidovudine and to detect clinically significant pharmacokinetic interactions. Both objectives are essential for planning studies of the efficacy of the zidovudine-dipyridamole combination. Eleven asymptomatic HIV-infected subjects (median CD4+ cell count, 311 cells per mm3), 10 of whom had been on zidovudine at 500 mg/day for at least 6 months, were admitted to the study.
Zidovudine
pharmacokinetics were measured on day 1. Dipyridamole was then begun at 600 mg/day (subjects 1 to 3) or 450 mg/day (subjects 4 to 11), and zidovudine and dipyridamole pharmacokinetics were measured on day 5. All subjects given 600 mg of dipyridamole per day developed headache or
nausea
, or both. Six of eight subjects given dipyridamole at 450 mg/day developed headache or mild
nausea
that resolved after a median of 2 days. The area under the zidovudine concentration-time curve was not significantly different on day 1 in comparison with that on day 5 (P = 0.11). Symptoms were significantly correlated with the maximum zidovudine concentrations, which were achieved when dipyridamole was dosed concomitantly (p = 0.03). Total (free and protein-bound) dipyridamole trough concentrations were near those demonstrating synergy with zidovudine against HIV in vitro. Dipyridamole was highly protein bound, with a median free/total dipyridamole ratio of 0.7%; the percent free/total dipyridamole ratio was inversely correlated with alpha 1 acid glycoprotein concentrations (r2 =0.66). Results of the study indicate that adjustment of the zidovudine dose was not required to achieve equivalent zidovudine concentrations when zidovudine was administered in combination with dipyridamole at the doses studied. In the short study described here, the zidovudine-dipyridamole combinations was well tolerated in asymptomatic HIV-infected subjects after the occurrence of mild transient symptoms.
...
PMID:Effect of dipyridamole on zidovudine pharmacokinetics and short-term tolerance in asymptomatic human immunodeficiency virus-infected subjects. 806 34
Zidovudine
is approved for administration in doses given every 4 hours. Less frequent dosing has been used in many clinical trials, but the toxicity and efficacy of such regimens have not been formally compared with the approved regimen. In this multicenter, randomized, double-blind, controlled trial, the safety, tolerance and efficacy of 600 mg of zidovudine given daily in two or six divided doses were compared. Three hundred and twenty patients with a CD4 lymphocyte count < 250 cells/mm3 (mean, 104 cells/mm3) or a prior AIDS-defining illness were treated with zidovudine 100 mg every 4 hours (regimen A) or 300 mg every 12 hours (regimen B). Eighty-eight patients (56%) and 94 patients (58%), assigned to regimens A and B, respectively, completed the planned 48 weeks of treatment. Serious anemia (hemoglobin < or = 7.5 g/dl) occurred in 13% and 7% of patients treated with regimens A and B, respectively (difference, 6%, 95% confidence interval [CI], 2, 12%; p = .13). The mean duration of treatment and the frequency of neutropenia and symptomatic complaints including
nausea
and headache were similar in the two treatment groups. The number of patients experiencing a new opportunistic infection (18% versus 20% for regimens A and B, respectively), and the number of deaths (five in each group) did not differ significantly between groups. The effect of treatment on CD4 lymphocyte counts and HIV p24 antigenemia also was similar for both regimens.
Zidovudine
given at the more convenient dose of 300 mg twice daily has similar safety, and tolerance and appears to have similar efficacy to the currently approved regimen. Use of this regimen should help simplify the treatment of HIV disease.
...
PMID:A comparative trial of zidovudine administered every four versus every twelve hours for the treatment of advanced HIV disease. 929 87
1
2
3
Next >>