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)

Despite the advent of new treatments, glucose control in the type 2 diabetes population is unsatisfactory. AC2993 (synthetic exendin-4; exenatide), a novel glucose-dependent insulinotropic agent, exhibited notable antidiabetic potential in two clinical studies in patients with type 2 diabetes. In study A, 24 subjects received sc injections of study medication (0.1 micro g/kg AC2993 or placebo) twice daily with meals for 5 d. Statistically significant reductions in mean postprandial circulating concentrations of glucose, insulin, and glucagon occurred following treatment with AC2993. In study B, 13 subjects receiving a single dose of study medication (0.05, 0.1, or 0.2 micro g/kg AC2993 or placebo) following an overnight fast had reduced fasting plasma glucose concentrations during the subsequent 8-h period. The relative glucose and insulin concentration profiles were consistent with glucose-dependent insulinotropism. AC2993 was well tolerated. Mild transient headache, nausea, and vomiting were the main adverse events. In conclusion, AC2993 acutely and markedly reduces fasting and postprandial glucose concentrations in patients with type 2 diabetes. During fasting, glucose-dependent enhancement of insulin secretion and suppression of glucagon secretion are the predominant mechanisms, and postprandially, slowing of gastric emptying is additionally operative. This robust antidiabetic effect warrants further evaluation of AC2993.
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PMID:Synthetic exendin-4 (exenatide) significantly reduces postprandial and fasting plasma glucose in subjects with type 2 diabetes. 1284 47

Phenethylbiguanide (DBI) was given to 70 unselected but not obese diabetic patients who were receiving restricted diabetic diets. The only side effects attributed to the drug were anorexia, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea in 28 patients. These symptoms subsided with reduction of dosage. No evidence of serious toxicity has been demonstrated in clinical and metabolic studies. In 27 of the 70 patients diabetes was controlled adequately with DBI alone, and more stable control was obtained in 11 labile diabetics who received DBI in combination with insulin.The mechanism of action is not definitely known.
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PMID:Phenethylbiguanide in diabetic patients; clinical and metabolic effects. 1363 34

Aberrations in cell cycle control occurs in the majority of human malignancies due to inactivation of tumor suppressor gene Rb by the phosphorylation induced by "hyperactive" cyclin-dependent kinases. Thus, it is quite reasonable to design cdk modulators for the prevention and treatment of human neoplasms. In order to target the cdk complexes, 2 main strategies were considered: to target the ATP binding site of cdks (direct cdk modulators) and to target upstream pathways required for cdk activation (indirect cdk modulators). Examples for the first group include flavopiridol, roscovitine, BMS-387032. Examples for the second group include perifosine, lovastatin, UCN-01. The first example of a direct small molecule cdk modulator tested in the clinic, flavopiridol, is a pan-cdk inhibitor that not only promotes cell cycle arrest but also halts transcriptional elongation, promotes apoptosis, induces differentiation and has antiangiogenic properties. Clinical trials with this agent were performed with at least 3 different schedules of administration: 1 hour infusion, 24 hour infusion and 72 hour infusion. Main toxicities for infusions >/=24 hours are secretory diarrhea and pro-inflammatory syndrome. In addition, patients receiving shorter infusions have nausea/vomiting and neutropenia. Some clinical responses were observed in several patients with refractory malignancies. Based on these encouraging results, a Phase 3 trial comparing standard combination chemotherapy versus combination chemotherapy plus flavopiridol is currently under investigation. The second example of direct small molecule cdk modulator tested in clinical trials is UCN-01 (7-hydroxi-staurosporine). UCN-01 has interesting preclinical features: inhibits ca2+-dependent PKCs, promotes apoptosis, arrest cell cycle progression at G1/S and abrogates checkpoints upon DNA damage. The first Phase I trial of UCN-01 demonstrated a very prolonged half-life. Based on this novel feature, UCN-01 is administered as a 72 hour continuous infusion every 4 weeks (second and subsequent cycles UCN-01 is administered as a 36-hour infusion). Other shorter schedules (i.e., 3 hours) are being tested. Dose-limiting toxicities include nausea/vomiting, hypoxemia and insulin-resistant hyperglycemia. Combination trials with cisplatin and other DNA-damaging agents are being tested. Recently, Phase I trials with two novel small molecule cdk modulators, BMS 387032 and R-Roscovitine (CYC202), have commenced with good tolerability. Phase 2 trials and Phase I trials in combination with standard chemotherapy is being planned with these agents. In summary, novel small molecule cdk modulators are being tested in the clinic with interesting results. Although these small molecules are directed towards a very prevalent cause of carcinogenesis, we need to test them in advanced clinical trials to determine the future of this class of agents for the prevention and therapy of human malignancies.
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PMID:Novel small molecule cyclin-dependent kinases modulators in human clinical trials. 1450 85

Aberrations in cell cycle progression occur in the majority of human malignancies. The main pathway affected is the retinoblastoma (Rb) pathway. The tumor suppressor gene Rb is an important component in the G(1)/S transition and its function is abnormal in most human neoplasms. Loss in Rb function occurs by the hyperactivation of the cyclin-dependent kinases (cdk's). Therefore, modulation of cdk's may have an important use for the therapy and prevention of human neoplasms. Efforts to obtain small-molecule cdk modulators yielded two classes of modulators: direct and indirect modulators. Direct cdk modulators are small molecules that specifically target the ATP binding site of cdk's. Examples for this group include flavopiridol, roscovitine and BMS-387032. In contrast, indirect cdk modulators affect cdk function due to modulation of upstream pathways required for cdk activation. Some examples include perifosine, lovastatin, and UCN-01. The first example of a direct small-molecule cdk modulator tested in the clinic, flavopiridol, is a pan-cdk inhibitor that not only promotes cell cycle arrest but also halts transcriptional elongation, promotes apoptosis, induces differentiation, and has antiangiogenic properties. Clinical trials with this agent were performed with at least three different schedules of administration: 1-, 24- and 72-h infusions. The main toxicities for infusions >/=24-h are secretory diarrhea and proinflammatory syndrome. In addition, patients receiving shorter infusions have nausea/vomiting and neutropenia. A phase II trial of patients with advanced non-small-cell lung carcinoma using the 72-h infusion every 2 weeks was recently completed. The median overall survival for the 20 patients who received treatment was 7.5 months, a survival similar to that obtained in a randomized trial of four chemotherapy regimens containing platinum analogues in combination with taxanes or gemcitabine, or with gefitinib, a recently approved EGFR inhibitor for the treatment of advanced lung cancer. Based on these encouraging results, a phase III trial comparing standard combination chemotherapy versus combination chemotherapy plus flavopiridol is currently under investigation. The second example of direct small-molecule cdk modulator tested in clinical trials is UCN-01 (7-hydroxystaurosporine). UCN-01 has interesting preclinical features: it inhibits Ca(2+)-dependent PKCs, promotes apoptosis, arrests cell cycle progression at G(1)/S, and abrogates checkpoints upon DNA damage. The first phase I trial of UCN-01 demonstrated a very prolonged half-life. Based on this novel feature, UCN-01 is administered as a 72-h continuous infusion every 4 weeks (in second and subsequent cycles UCN-01 is administered as a 36-h infusion). Other shorter schedules (i.e. 3 h) are being tested. Dose-limiting toxicities include nausea/vomiting, hypoxemia, and insulin-resistant hyperglycemia. Combination trials with cisplatin and other DNA-damaging agents are being tested. Recently, phase I trials with two novel small-molecule cdk modulators, BMS 387032 and R-Roscovitine (CYC202), have commenced with good tolerability. In summary, novel small-molecule cdk modulators are being tested in the clinic with interesting results. Although these small molecules are directed towards a very prevalent cause of carcinogenesis, we need to test them in advanced clinical trials to determine the future of this class of agents for the prevention and therapy of human malignancies.
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PMID:Small-molecule cyclin-dependent kinase modulators. 1452 86

An unresolved problem in the management of type 2 diabetes is that improvement of glycemic control with insulin, insulin secretagogues, and insulin sensitizers is often accompanied by undesired weight gain. This problem is of particular concern in ethnic groups with a high propensity for diabetes and obesity, such as African Americans and Hispanics. Two 1-year, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials in insulin-treated patients with type 2 diabetes have shown that adjunctive therapy with pramlintide, an analog of the human beta-cell hormone amylin, reduces A(1C) with concomitant weight loss, rather than weight gain. To assess the effect of pramlintide in various ethnic groups with type 2 diabetes using insulin, we conducted a pooled post hoc analysis of the 2 trials, which included all Caucasian (n = 315), African American (n = 47), and Hispanic (n = 48) patients (age 57 years, A(1C) 9.1%, body mass index [BMI] 33 kg/m(2), mean values) who completed 52 weeks of treatment with either pramlintide (120 microg twice daily or 150 microg 3 times a day) or placebo. Primary endpoints included changes from baseline to week 52 in A(1C) and body weight. Collectively, pramlintide-treated patients achieved significant reductions from baseline in both A(1C) and body weight (placebo-corrected treatment effects at week 52: -0.5% and -2.6 kg, respectively, both P <.0001). The simultaneous reduction in A(1C) and body weight at week 52 was evident across all 3 ethnic groups and appeared to be most pronounced in African Americans (-0.7%, -4.1 kg), followed by Caucasians (-0.5%, -2.4 kg) and Hispanics (-0.3%, -2.3 kg). The glycemic improvement with pramlintide was not associated with an increased incidence of hypoglycemia over the entire study period (43% pramlintide v 40% placebo). Nausea, the most common adverse event associated with pramlintide treatment, was mostly mild and confined to the first 4 weeks of therapy (25% pramlintide v 16% placebo) with comparable patterns in the 3 ethnic groups. Thus, pending further experience, the combined improvement in glycemic and weight control with pramlintide treatment appears to be generalizable to a broad population of mixed ethnicity.
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PMID:Effect of pramlintide on A1C and body weight in insulin-treated African Americans and Hispanics with type 2 diabetes: a pooled post hoc analysis. 1466 70

Pituitary coma is a rare case of emergency and primarily due to ACTH and TSH deficiency. Pituitary coma occurs more often in patients with well-known pituitary deficiency than in patients with intrasellar tumor. Clinical manifestations are hypotonia, bradycardia, decreased skin and nipple pigmentation, muscle weakness, vomitus, nausea, obstipation, hypothermia, and hypoventilation. A postpartal agalactia is often the first sign of Sheehan's syndrome. Unlike primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison's disease) ACTH deficiency does not cause hyperpigmentation, hyperkalemia, or salt loss. The suspicion of pituitary coma requires replacement with 100 mg hydrocortisone iv, 200 mg hydrocortisone iv/24 h, 500 micro g levothyroxine iv and fluid substitution. Since thyroxine accelerates the degradation of cortisol and can precipitate adrenal crisis in patients with limited pituitary reserve, hydrocortisone replacement should always precede levothyroxine therapy. ACTH stimulation test, CRH stimulation test and insulin tolerance test (optional) should be performed after therapeutic compensation to determine pituitary function.
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PMID:[Hypophyseal coma]. 1468 87

The objective of the present study was to estimate the prevalence of the different pathological conditions causing clinically evident androgen excess and to document the degree of long-term success of suppressive and/or antiandrogen hormonal therapy in a large consecutive population of patients. All patients presenting for evaluation of symptoms potentially related to androgen excess between October 1987 and June 2002 were evaluated, and the data were maintained prospectively in a computerized database. For the assessment of therapeutic response, a retrospective review of the medical chart was performed, after the exclusion of those patients seeking fertility therapy only, or with inadequate follow-up or poor compliance. A total of 1281 consecutive patients were seen during the study period. Excluded from analysis were 408 patients in whom we were unable to evaluate hormonal status, determine ovulatory status, or find any evidence of androgen excess. In the remaining population of 873 patients, the unbiased prevalence of androgen-secreting neoplasms was 0.2%, 21-hydroxylase-deficient classic adrenal hyperplasia (CAH) was 0.6%, 21-hydroxylase-deficient nonclassic adrenal hyperplasia (NCAH) was 1.6%, hyperandrogenic insulin-resistant acanthosis nigricans (HAIRAN) syndrome was 3.1%, idiopathic hirsutism was 4.7%, and polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) was 82.0%. Fifty-nine (6.75%) patients had elevated androgen levels and hirsutism but normal ovulation. A total of 257 patients were included in the assessment of the response to hormonal therapy. The mean duration of follow-up was 33.5 months (range, 6-155). Hirsutism improved in 86%, menstrual dysfunction in 80%, acne in 81%, and hair loss in 33% of patients. The major side effects noted were irregular vaginal bleeding (16.1%), nausea (13.0%), and headaches (12.6%); only 36.6% of patients never complained of side effects. In this large study of consecutive patients presenting with clinically evident androgen excess, specific identifiable disorders (NCAH, CAH, HAIRAN syndrome, and androgen-secreting neoplasms) were observed in approximately 7% of subjects, whereas functional androgen excess, principally PCOS, was observed in the remainder. Hirsutism, menstrual dysfunction, or acne, but not alopecia, improved in the majority of patients treated with a combination suppressive therapy; although more than 60% experienced side effects.
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PMID:Androgen excess in women: experience with over 1000 consecutive patients. 1476 47

Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is synthesized from proglucagon in enteroendocrine cells and regulates glucose homeostasis via multiple complementary actions on appetite, gastrointestinal motility and islet hormone secretion. GLP-1 is secreted from the distal gut in response to food ingestion, and levels of circulating GLP-1 may be diminished in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus. GLP-1 administration stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion, inhibits glucagon secretion, and lowers blood glucose in normal and diabetic rodents and in humans. GLP-1 exerts additional glucose-lowering actions in patients with diabetes mellitus already treated with metformin or sulfonylurea therapy. GLP-1 inhibits gastric emptying in healthy individuals and those with diabetes mellitus, and excess GLP-1 administration may cause nausea or vomiting in susceptible individuals. Chronic GLP-1 treatment of normal or diabetic rodents is associated with bodyweight loss and GLP-1 agonists transiently inhibit food intake and may prevent bodyweight gain in humans. The potential for GLP-1 therapy to prevent deterioration of beta-cell function is exemplified by studies demonstrating that GLP-1 analogs stimulate proliferation and neogenesis of beta-cells, leading to expansion of beta-cell mass in diabetic rodents. The rapid N-terminal inactivation of bioactive GLP-1 by dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) limits the utility of the native peptide for the treatment of patients with diabetes mellitus, and has fostered the development of more potent and stable protease-resistant GLP-1 analogs which exhibit longer durations of action. The importance of DPP-IV for glucose control is illustrated by the phenotype of rodents with genetic inactivation of DPP-IV which exhibit reduced glycemic excursion and increased levels of circulating GLP-1 in vivo. Inhibitors of DPP-IV potentiate incretin action by preventing degradation of GLP-1 and glucose-dependent insulinotropic peptide, and lower blood glucose in normal rodents and in experimental models of diabetes mellitus. Hence, orally available DPP-IV inhibitors also represent a new class of therapeutic agents that enhance incretin action for the treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
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PMID:Harnessing the therapeutic potential of glucagon-like peptide-1: a critical review. 1576 27

Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) was discovered as an insulinotropic gut hormone, suggesting a physiological role as an incretin hormone, i.e., being responsible, in part, for the higher insulin secretory response after oral as compared to intravenous glucose administration. This difference, the incretin effect, is partially lost in patients with Type 2 diabetes. The actions of GLP-1 include (a) a stimulation of insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent manner, (b) a suppression of glucagon, (c) a reduction in appetite and food intake, (d) a deceleration of gastric emptying, (e) a stimulation of beta-cell neogenesis, growth and differentiation in animal and tissue culture experiments, and (f) an in vitro inhibition of beta-cell apoptosis induced by different toxins. Intravenous GLP-1 can normalize and subcutaneous GLP-1 can significantly lower plasma glucose in the majority of patients with Type 2 diabetes. GLP-1 itself, however, is inactivated rapidly in vivo and thus does not appear to be useful as a therapeutic agent in the long-term treatment of Type 2 diabetes. Other agents acting on GLP-1 receptors have been found (like exendin-4) or developed as GLP-1 derivatives (like liraglutide or GLP-1/CJC-1131). Clinical trials with exenatide (two injections per day) and liraglutide (one injection per day) have shown reductions in glucose concentrations and HbA1c by more than 1%, associated with moderate weight loss (2-3 kg), but also some nausea and, rarely, vomiting. It is hoped that this new class of drugs interacting with the GLP-1 or other incretin receptors, the so-called "incretin mimetics", will broaden our armamentarium of antidiabetic medications in the nearest future.
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PMID:Glucagon-like peptide 1 and its derivatives in the treatment of diabetes. 1578 Apr 33

This study aims to evaluate and compare the early outcome of both pancreas-alone transplantation (PTA) and simultaneous kidney-pancreas transplantation (SPKT) focusing on the complications affecting the first month after the procedures. The records of all patients who underwent PTA or SPKT were reviewed. We considered the length of ICU stay, the need for postoperative ventilatory support, hemodynamic and metabolic data (arterial pH, serum glucose, need for exogenous insulin), infectious diseases incidence, microbiological colonization rate and any kind of postoperative complication arising during the first month after the transplantation. PTA recipients underwent a quicker surgery (P < 0.01) with shorter ICU stay (P < 0.05) and a lower need for postoperative mechanical ventilation (P < 0.05). They also had a higher hemodynamic stability (P < 0.05) with less cardiological complications (P < 0.05) in the intra- and postoperative phases; bacterial colonisation was also less frequent in PTA recipients (P < 0.05). On the contrary, no significant difference was noted with regard to postoperative nausea/vomiting, sudden myocardial death, ICU re-admissions, graft function, rate of rejection, grafts explantation and re-transplantation. PTA could be considered as preemptive for severe diabetic complications in patients with long-lasting severe type I diabetes. However, establishing the correct timing of PTA is of paramount importance in order not to expose the patients early to risks arising from a major surgery and heavy immunosuppressive treatments.
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PMID:Early morbidity after pancreas transplantation. 1629 54


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