Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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The aim of the present study was to examine the efficacy and safety of combination therapy with amoxicillin (AMPC), lansoprazole, and plaunotol for the eradication of H. pylori in dialysis patients. The subjects consisted of 15 dialysis patients (10 men and 5 women, mean age of 56 +/- 2.4 years) in whom H. pylori was found in the stomach. H. pylori status was evaluated by histology, culture and rapid urease test with biopsy specimens of the gastric mucosa. The patients were treated with AMPC 500 mg once a day for 3 weeks, lansoprazole 30 mg once a day for 8 weeks and plaunotol 80 mg three times a day for 24 weeks. In addition, the concentrations of serum gastrin and gastric juice ammonia were measured. Fourteen patients completed the treatment schedule, while one discontinued treatment because of nausea and diarrhea. Among the 14 patients, H. pylori was eradicated in 11 without any side effects (eradication rate 78.6%). Concentrations of gastric juice ammonia and serum gastrin were reduced significantly in patients who became H. pylori-negative. The present study indicates that combination therapy with AMPC, lansoprazole and plaunotol is safe and efficient for the eradication of H. pylori in dialysis patients. The results also suggested that elevated concentrations of gastric juice ammonia and serum gastrin in dialysis patients can be attributed, at least in part, to H. pylori infection.
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PMID:[Eradication of Helicobacter pylori in patients with end-stage renal disease undergoing dialysis treatment]. 882 54

The efficacy and safety of combination therapy with amoxicillin, lansoprazole, and plaunotol for the eradication of Helicobacter pylori in patients on dialysis were evaluated. The study subjects comprised 15 dialysis patients in whom H pylori had been found in the gastric mucosa. The patients were given 500 mg amoxicillin once a day for 3 weeks, 30 mg lansoprazole once a day for 8 weeks, and 80 mg plaunotol three times a day for 24 weeks. Endoscopy was performed on entry and at 4 and 24 weeks after cessation of amoxicillin. The concentrations of serum gastrin and gastric juice ammonia also were measured. Fourteen patients completed the treatment protocol, one having dropped out because of nausea and diarrhea. H pylori was eradicated in 11 of the 14 patients 4 weeks after the end of amoxicillin therapy (eradication rate, 78.6%). All but one patient was free of H pylori 24 weeks after the amoxicillin was discontinued. Patients who became negative for H pylori had significantly decreased serum gastrin and gastric juice ammonia concentrations. Our findings indicate that a combination of amoxicillin, lansoprazole, and plaunotol can be used to eradicate H pylori in patients on dialysis.
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PMID:Eradication of Helicobacter pylori in patients with end-stage renal disease under dialysis treatment. 900 34

We reported a case of adult-onset citrullinemia associated with hypertrigliceridemia and diabetes mellitus. A 24-year-old female was healthy until recently. She first felt intermittent headaches and nausea. Then she noticed memory loss and tiredness. Abnormal behavior such as getting lost on the way from her company sometimes occurred. She came to our hospital because these symptoms had been getting worse. Neurologically she had a very mild disturbed consciousness. An EEG recording showed diffuse slow wave with high amplitude. MR image of the brain showed hyper-intensity in globus pallidus with T1-weighted image. Plasma citrullin level was very high. Plasma ammonia and triglyceride showed a moderately high level. Using biopsied liver tissues, the enzymes of the urea cycle were analyzed. Argininosuccinate synthetase activity was extremely low. Because of clinical course and the result of liver biopsy, the patient was diagnosed as type 2 citrullinemia. A low protein diet was started, but intermittent nausea and consciousness disturbance did not improve. A partial liver transplantation was performed. The living donor was her father, a 50-year-old male, who had normal liver function. After the liver transplantation, all neurological signs soon disappeared. Plasma citrulline, ammonia and triglyceride normalized rapidly. An EEG recording became normal, and the hyper-intensity in globus pallidus with T1-weighted MR image disappeared two months after surgery. Liver transplantation should be planned as soon as possible in a type 2 citrullinemia patient.
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PMID:[Liver transplantation in type II citrullinemia]. 1065 68

Poor intestinal absorption and excessive renal loss of dibasic amino acids result in low plasma concentrations in patients with lysinuric protein intolerance (LPI). Arginine and ornithine deficiency impair the function of the urea cycle and cause hyperammonemia after protein intake, while chronic lysine deficiency may cause growth failure and lead to reduced bone density in such patients. Since high lysine concentrations inhibit several enzymes of the urea cycle in the liver, lysine supplementation may induce hyperammonemia in LPI. We thus studied how LPI patients tolerate high plasma lysine by intravenous (IV) infusion of 3.3 mmol/kg lysine hydrochloride over 90 minutes in 6 adult patients and 4 healthy controls. The plasma lysine concentration (mean +/- SD, range) peaked in the patients (9,114 +/- 1,864, 7,156 to 12,044 micromol/L) and controls (10,185 +/- 2,253, 7,714to 13,122 micromol/L) at 90 minutes. Urinary lysine excretion peaked in the second 2-hour urine collection in the patients (4,582 +/- 1,276, 3,018 to 6,315 micromol/m2 body surface area per hour) and in the first 2-hour collection in the controls (5,373 +/- 1,766, 3,551 to 7,286 micromol/m2/h). Two patients had mild nausea but no hyperammonemia and one patient had moderate hyperammonemia (peak, 112 micromol/L) at the end of the infusion. Orotic acid excretion increased in 2 subjects with a peak excretion rate of 33 and 251 micromol/m2/h in the third 2-hour collection after starting the load. All other subjects remained asymptomatic and showed no change in plasma ammonia or urinary orotic acid excretion. We thus conclude that an acute increase in plasma lysine caused minimal clinical or biochemical untoward effects in patients with LPI. Moderate increases in plasma lysine after low-dose oral supplementation with lysine or well-absorbed lysine derivatives are probably well tolerated in LPI.
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PMID:Effect of lysine infusion on urea cycle in lysinuric protein intolerance. 1083 Nov 73

Glutamine is used to supplement intravenous and enteral feeding. Although there have been many human studies of its efficacy, there have been very few studies with safety as a primary goal. This article analyzes the literature on the safety of glutamine and also examines the available information on high intakes of total protein and other amino acids, so that additional indicators of potentially adverse effects can be suggested. Four studies that specifically addressed glutamine safety were identified, from which it was concluded that glutamine is safe in adults and in preterm infants. However, the published studies of safety have not fully taken account of chronic consumption by healthy subjects of all age groups. To help identify potential undetected hazards of glutamine intake, the literature on adverse effects of high dietary intake of protein and other amino acids was examined. High protein is reputed to cause nausea, vomiting and ultimately death in adults, and has been shown to result in neurological damage in preterm infants. Individual amino acids cause a variety of adverse effects, some of them potentially fatal, but neurological effects were the most frequently observed. Because glutamine is metabolized to glutamate and ammonia, both of which have neurological effects, psychological and behavioral testing may be especially important.
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PMID:Assessment of the safety of glutamine and other amino acids. 1153 13

Microbiological, biological, and chemical toxins have been employed in warfare and in terrorist attacks. In this era, it is imperative that health care providers are familiar with illnesses caused by these agents. Botulinum toxin produces a descending flaccid paralysis. Staphylococcal enterotoxin B produces a syndrome of fever, nausea, and diarrhea and may produce a pulmonary syndrome if aerosolized. Clostridium perfringens epsilon-toxin could possibly be aerosolized to produce acute pulmonary edema. Ricin intoxication can manifest as gastrointestinal hemorrhage after ingestion, severe muscle necrosis after intramuscular injection, and acute pulmonary disease after inhalation. Nerve agents inhibit acetylcholinesterase and thus produce symptoms of increased cholinergic activity. Ammonia, chlorine, vinyl chloride, phosgene, sulfur dioxide, and nitrogen dioxide, tear gas, and zinc chloride primarily injure the upper respiratory tract and the lungs. Sulfur mustard (and nitrogen mustard) are vesicant and alkylating agents. Cyanide poisoning ranges from sudden-onset headache and drowsiness to severe hypoxemia, cardiovascular collapse, and death. Health care providers should be familiar with the medical consequences of toxin exposure, and understand the pathophysiology and management of resulting illness.
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PMID:Microbiological, biological, and chemical weapons of warfare and terrorism. 1207 87

Acute liver disease was diagnosed in three pregnant patients: two 30-year-old women had a 'haemolysis, elevated liver enzymes, low platelets' (HELLP) syndrome and acute fatty liver of pregnancy, respectively, and a 20-year-old woman had acute liver failure due to acute hepatitis B. The first two patients had a caesarean section, the third one delivered her child, which died spontaneously shortly after birth at a gestational age of 23 weeks. She was then treated by liver transplantation. All three patients left the hospital in good condition. Liver diseases in pregnancy may be pregnancy-related, e.g. the HELLP syndrome and acute fatty liver of pregnancy, but they may also be coincidental phenomena, e.g. viral hepatitis. The HELLP syndrome is often associated with pre-eclampsia, and presents with epigastric pain and thrombocytopenia with haemolysis. Acute fatty liver disease and acute liver failure due to hepatitis present with liver insufficiency characterised by anorexia, nausea, coagulopathy, hypoglycaemia and elevated serum ammonia levels. Management depends on the diagnosis and the gestational age; pregnancy complicated by acute fatty liver disease should be terminated while pregnancy complicated by the HELLP syndrome early in pregnancy may be maintained to improve the outcome of the foetus. In acute liver failure due to viral hepatitis, termination of pregnancy alone does not affect the disease.
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PMID:[The pregnant patient with acute liver disease]. 1253 8

A 37-year-old woman presented with increasing abdominal pain and jaundice. Six weeks before admission, she developed persistent diarrhea and jaundice of the skin. She also bruised easily, and her gums bled. In the subsequent weeks, her appetite decreased, she was fatigued, and she had nausea, vomiting, and abdominal distension. She had a history of drinking 1 quart of vodka every day for 20 years, with brief periods of abstinence; she stopped consuming alcohol 11 days before admission because it no longer provided symptomatic relief. Her past medical history was also notable for depression, including a suicide attempt 4 years earlier. She did not smoke, use illicit drugs, or have unprotected sexual intercourse. She had received no blood transfusions and had not traveled recently. She took no medications, except for occasional ibuprofen. On physical examination, she was thin and deeply jaundiced, and she trembled and responded slowly to questions. She was afebrile but tachypneic, and she had orthostatic hypotension. Her HEENT examination was notable for scleral and sublingual icterus, as well as crusted blood on her gums and teeth. The jugular veins were flat. The cardiac examination revealed tachycardia (heart rate, 103 beats per minute) without murmurs, rubs, or gallops. The abdomen was nontender and protuberant, with hypoactive bowel sounds; the spleen was not palpable, and there was no fluid wave or caput medusae. The liver percussed to 18 cm, with a smooth edge extending 10 cm below the costal margin. She had cutaneous telangiectases on her chest and bilateral palmar erythema. There was no peripheral edema. The neurologic examination was notable for asterixis. Her stool was guaiac positive. Laboratory studies revealed the following values: hematocrit, 21.2%; white blood cells, 17,310/mm(3); ammonia, 42 micromol/L; serum creatinine, 3.9 mg/dL; serum urea nitrogen, 70 mg/dL; albumin, 2.1 g/dL; total bilirubin, 26.8 mg/dL; alanine aminotransferase, 14 U/L; aspartate aminotransferase, 77 U/L; alkaline phosphatase, 138 U/L; prothrombin time, 103 seconds (international normalized ratio, 10.6); and urinary sodium, <5 mg/dL. Urinalysis revealed an elevated specific gravity and numerous muddy granular casts. Hepatitis A, B, and C serologies were negative. On abdominal ultrasound examination, there was no ascites, and the liver was echogenic. The portal and hepatic veins were patent, and the hepatic arteries were normal. The spleen measured 14 cm. What is the diagnosis?
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PMID:Cases from the Osler Medical Service at Johns Hopkins University. 1258 38

Hepatic encephalopathy is a frequent complication of cirrhosis. Abnormalities of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) and its metabolites are recognized and may contribute to its pathogenesis. We therefore studied the effect of an oral tryptophan load (6-18 g) upon psychometric test scores and analyzed EEG's in alcoholic cirrhotic patients. Eight patients had had previous encephalopathic episodes related to variceal bleeds and one patient was awaiting a liver transplant. Five out of the 10 patients had at least one abnormal baseline psychometric test. Following tryptophan challenge there were no changes in blood ammonia but plasma tryptophan levels were elevated approximately 10-fold (p < 0.01 x 10(-7)). Nevertheless, there were no statistically significant changes in psychometric testing or analyzed EEG frequency distribution. All patients reported nausea or vomiting while one patient developed a short-lived serotonin like syndrome. We conclude that in this group of patients, an oral tryptophan load does not induce or worsen subclinical hepatic encephalopathy. If the high blood levels of tryptophan seen in these studies are able to influence cerebral neurotransmitter synthesis, the results do not support a primary role for abnormalities of 5-HT neurotransmission in hepatic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Oral tryptophan challenge studies in cirrhotic patients: no evidence of neuropsychiatric changes. 1456 68

Since 1993, the New York State Department of Health, funded by the Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry, has collected data about non-petroleum hazardous substances releases through the Hazardous Substances Emergency Events Surveillance (NYHSEES) project. This study investigates risk factors for hazardous substances releases that may result in public health consequences such as injury or reported health effects. The 6428 qualifying events that occurred during the 10-year-period of 1993-2002 involved 8838 hazardous substances, 842 evacuations, more than 75,419 people evacuated, and more than 3120 people decontaminated. These events occurred both at fixed facilities (79%) and during transport (21%). The causative factors most frequently contributing to reported events were equipment failure (39%) and human error (33%). Five of the 10 chemicals most frequently associated with injuries were also among the 10 chemicals most frequently involved in reported events: sulfuric acid, hydrochloric acid, ammonia, sodium hypochlorite, and carbon monoxide. The chemical categories most frequently associated with events, and with events with adverse health effects were volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and solvents, and acids. Events with releases of hazardous substances were associated with injuries to 3089 people including employees (37%), responders (12%), the general public (29%) and students (22%). The most frequently reported adverse health effects were respiratory irritation, headache, and nausea or vomiting. Most of the injured were transported to the hospital, treated, and released (55%) or treated at the scene (29%). These data have been used for emergency response training, planning, and prevention activities to reduce morbidity and mortality from future events.
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PMID:New York hazardous substances emergency events surveillance: learning from hazardous substances releases to improve safety. 1551 63


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