Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (pancreatitis)
16,014 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Glycogen storage disorder type 1A (GSD 1A) is an inherited disorder of glycogen metabolism characterized by fasting hypoglycemia, lactic acidosis, hyperuricemia, and hyperlipidemia. These children have a higher risk of developing pancreatitis because of hypertriglyceridemia. Drug-induced pancreatitis accounts for a small proportion of cases of pancreatitis. The mechanism of drug-induced pancreatitis include hypersensitivity, direct toxic injury or indirectly by inducing hypertriglyceridemia. Propofol is often the drug of choice for induction of anesthesia in ambulatory surgical procedures. There are various reports in the literature describing pancreatitis induced by propofol. We present a 4-year-old girl with GSD 1A, who required tonsillectomy and adenoidectomy under general anesthesia. She developed acute pancreatitis in the postoperative period. Propofol was used as a general anesthetic and the postoperative incidence of pancreatitis is discussed.
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PMID:Acute pancreatitis after anesthesia with propofol in a child with glycogen storage disease type IA. 1671 86

While classical opportunistic infections have decreased as the main cause of hospital admission of HIV-infected patients, other conditions including drug-related toxicities seem to have increased. We assessed the proportion of patients with hospital admission due to antiretroviral (ARV)-related toxicities over the last 7 years at a single HIV/AIDS reference institution located in Madrid. A total of 1981 consecutive hospital admissions in 1581 different HIV-infected patients were analyzed. Nearly half of them (45%) were on ARV therapy. Overall, ARV-related toxicities were the main or secondary reason for hospital admission in 141 patients (7%). Liver toxicity was the most frequent complication (n = 42; 30%), of which one-third were associated with NVP use and 80% occurred in subjects with underlying chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Other main ARV-related toxicities were bone marrow toxicity due to zidovudine (17%), pancreatitis (13%), and indinavirassociated nephrolithiasis (6%). Eight patients presented with symptomatic hyperlactatemia, two of them with lactic acidosis. All subjects with ARV-related toxicities had a favorable outcome, except one with prior HCVrelated end-stage liver disease, who died after experiencing hepatic decompensation following initiation of a protease inhibitor-based regimen.
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PMID:Impact of antiretroviral treatment-related toxicities on hospital admissions in HIV-infected patients. 1698 5

The introduction of highly active antiretroviral therapy for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection has led to substantial reduction in morbidity and near-complete suppression of HIV-1 replication. This progress has been tempered by a growing number of new adverse effects. Mitochondrial toxicity is one aspect of these long-term toxicities of antiretroviral drugs, with the role of nucleoside analogs being particularly underlined. Some cases of impaired mitochondrial function have been clearly identified, such as pancreatitis, neuropathy, miopathy and lactic acidosis. Beyond the inhibition of DNA polymerase-g using nucleoside analogs, it appears that several physiopathologic mechanisms interact to explain the observed toxicity. At present there is no reliable method to detect subclinical mitochondrial toxicity. There is no proven effective therapy for antiretroviral therapy-associated mitochondrial toxicity other than ceasing the implicated agent, and even with this strategy, resolution of symptoms may be incomplete. Therefore, investigation of mitochondrial toxicity of new compounds or new combinations is of growing interest for the clinical application of antiretroviral agents.
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PMID:[Antiretroviral therapy and mitochondrial toxicity]. 1733 66

Didanosine, which is a synthetic nucleoside analogue intracellularly phosphorylated to the active metabolite, inhibits the activity of HIV-1 reverse transcriptase by competing with the natural substrate. Currently, didanosine is mainly provided as an enteric-coated capsule. In vitro, the molecule is active against laboratory strains and clinical isolates of HIV-1 in resting and activated T cells and monocyte/macrophages. Didanosine may select for resistance mutations that may render the drug inactive against the virus; L74V and K65R remain as the main didanosine-related mutations. In vitro, phenotypic susceptibility to didanosine was decreased beyond a defined fold change clinical cut-off (1.7), and it is considered that genotypic resistance exists when five thymidine-associated mutations or four plus M184V are present. In vivo, clinical studies have shown that didanosine retains significant antiviral activity in patients who have up to five nucleoside analogue mutations at baseline. Didanosine is useful in patients with no previous therapy, as well as in experienced patients in whom one or more antiretroviral regimens has failed.Enteric-coated didanosine is taken once daily, its co-administration with food has been recently evaluated and a reduction of the efficacy of the antiretroviral treatment was not observed. Administered with lamivudine (or emtricitabine), it can be considered a good alternative for use in the nucleoside analogue backbone included in combination therapies for antiretroviral-naive patients. Didanosine could be used in initial treatments for patients intolerant of zidovudine, abacavir or tenofovir. It can be included in once-daily combination regimens, which are more convenient and patient friendly.Prospective, observational and open-label studies, as well as clinical trials (with durations between 24 and 96 weeks), have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of didanosine plus lamivudine (or emtricitabine) plus efavirenz (or nevirapine) in previously untreated HIV-1-infected patients. The administration of didanosine to treatment-experienced patients has been evaluated in two different contexts: patients in whom previous therapies have failed (rescue therapy) and those with controlled viraemia who are switched to a didanosine-containing regimen for simplification.Adverse events associated with the administration of didanosine have been well known since the initial clinical trials with the drug. Gastrointestinal intolerance, peripheral neuropathy and hyperamylasaemia/pancreatitis were the most frequently reported. In the highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) era, the rate of adverse events has decreased. The tolerability of didanosine has been clearly improved with the development of the enteric-coated capsule. Severe manifestations of mitochondrial toxicity, including lactic acidosis and abnormal fat distribution, are rare complications, and occur most frequently when didanosine is used in combination with stavudine.
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PMID:Didanosine enteric-coated capsule: current role in patients with HIV-1 infection. 1760 Mar 92

In the last 10 years, the enormous impact of combination antiretroviral (ARV) therapy on paediatric HIV-associated mortality and morbidity in well-resourced settings and its role in the prevention of mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV cannot be underestimated. However, it is thus inevitable that children with HIV-1 infection will be exposed to ARVs for an ever-increasing length of time throughout post-natal growth and development, and the cumulative toxicities are becoming progressively apparent. Evidence for nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI)-associated mitochondrial toxicity is seen in vitro, in animal models and in NRTI-exposed adults and children. Proposed mechanisms of NRTI mitochondrial toxicity include, among others, impairment of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) replication and acquisition of mtDNA point mutations. Alterations in the mtDNA synthesis potentially reduce the production of mtDNA-encoded respiratory chain subunits, resulting in impaired oxidative phosphorylation and mitochondrial dysfunction. NRTI-associated mitochondrial toxicity in children has varied presentations including lactic acidosis, pancreatitis, cardiomyopathy and neuropathy, which are comparable to NRTI-exposed adults and children with congenital mitochondrial disorders. In the prevention of MTCT, uninfected infants are exposed to an ever-widening range of ARVs, often from conception and throughout fetal life. Animal models demonstrate evidence of mitochondrial toxicity from perinatal NRTI exposure, but controversy continues as to the extent of mitochondrial effects in NRTI-exposed children. Paediatric studies assessing the impact of reduced exposure to NRTIs or the use of NRTIs with lower mitochondrial toxicity are urgently required. In an era of expanding treatment options, minimizing toxicities becomes an increasing possibility, indeed a necessity.
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PMID:HIV and mitochondrial toxicity in children. 1799 78

Toxicities related to antiretroviral therapy make long-term adherence to therapy difficult for patients and present challenges to providers, especially those in the resource-poor world who work with a limited formulary. In resource-poor settings, where limited drug options are the rule, when and how to change therapy are especially difficult problems. Drugs such as stavudine and didanosine are associated with serious metabolic complications, such as lactic acidosis, pancreatitis, and peripheral neuropathy. Antiretroviral agents associated with fewer metabolic effects, such as tenofovir and abacavir, remain widely unavailable. Because the current formulary restrictions appear to be unlikely to change quickly, providers in resource-poor countries must be familiar with the common adverse events-including metabolic complications, hypersensitivity reactions, anemia, and liver enzyme abnormalities-and must understand how to manage them with what is locally available. Most importantly, to avoid drug toxicities, a larger formulary is needed in resource-poor settings, and this must be a high priority for policy makers and health care professionals involved in treating human immunodeficiency virus infection globally.
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PMID:Antiretroviral therapy-associated toxicities in the resource-poor world: the challenge of a limited formulary. 1818 93

Several pharmacogenetics studies have analyzed the influence of specific genetic polymorphisms on the toxicity of antiretroviral treatment. The present review describes some of the adverse effects of antiretroviral drugs in which a genetic predisposition may be involved: efavirenz-induced neurological toxicity, generally associated with the 516G>T polymorphism of liver enzyme cytochrome P450 2B6 (CYP2B6); hypersensitivity reactions to nevirapine, associated with specific alleles of major histocompatibility complex, mainly the HLA-DRB1*0101 allele, which, in combination with a high CD4 lymphocyte count, has been associated with systemic reactions and hepatitis in Caucasians, and the HLA-Cw8 allele, which is associated with hypersensitivity reactions in persons from the Italian island of Sardinia and from Japan; nevirapine-induced hepatotoxicity associated with the C>T polymorphism in position 3435T of the ABCB1 (MDR-1) gene codifying for glycoprotein P (lower risk); hyperbilirubinemia in patients exposed to atazanavir or indinavir carrying the UGT1A1*28 polymorphism; peripheral neuropathy with nucleoside analogues associated with haplogroup T of the mitochondrial genome (higher risk) and with the HFE C282Y genotype of the hemochromatosis gene (lower risk); the mutation in codon 964 (R964C) of the POLG gene that codifies the mitochondrial polymerase DNA gamma described in a Thai patient with lactic acidosis; the ABCC2 gene haplotypes associated with tenofovir-induced proximal tubulopathy, and the risk of pancreatitis in persons with mutations in the CFTR and SPINK-1 genes.
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PMID:[Toxicogenetics of antiretroviral treatment (II): neurotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, lactic acidosis, kidney damage, and other adverse effects of antiretroviral drugs]. 1868 Jun 93

Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is now a chronic manageable disease due to which is it imperative for reviewing various medical emergencies which an individual case may encounter. Emergencies may occur at any stage of the disease. HIV infection is associated with several opportunistic infections/malignancies that may be life threatening and need quick intervention by health care workers. These emergencies could be related to opportunistic infections that are seen at presentation or that occur as the immune system gets weaker, or may be HIV induced diseases like enteropathy and wasting, diarrhea leading to dehydration and its sequel, neurological complication like PML etc. and from complications resulting from use of anti-HIV medication like lactic acidosis, pancreatitis, bone marrow suppression and may include the immune reconstitution syndromes.
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PMID:Emergencies in HIV medicine--part I. 1908 56

In a short span of two and a half decades, HIV/AIDS has emerged as second largest killer disease that has affected mankind. The triple drug antiretroviral therapy (ART) has ensured a reasonably good quality of life to HIV infected individuals. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection is associated with several opportunistic infections/malignancies that may be life threatening and need quick intervention by health care workers. These emergencies could be related to opportunistic infections that are seen at presentation or that occur as the immune system gets weaker, or may bedue to HIV itself per se. The emergencies could also result from use of antiretroviral drugs like lactic acidosis, pancreatitis, bone marrow suppression and may include the immune reconstitution syndromes. The emergencies due to the opportunistic conditions and HIV per se had been dealt with in detail in the part 1, and this part describes various emergencies that could be encountered due to the administration of the anti retroviral treatment. Some patients may present due to emergencies as a result of co-administration of antiretroviral drugs with drugs used for treatment of some opportunistic infections like ATT etc.
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PMID:Emergencies in HIV--part 2. 1926 5

Mitochondrial toxicity is a well-recognized adverse effect of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor therapy for human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Transient lactic acidosis is often observed in children born after in utero antiretroviral prophylaxis against mother-to-child transmission of HIV. However, the extent and the mechanism of in utero adverse effects are largely unknown. We describe a 4-year-old girl who presented with manifestations of severe mitochondrial disease, specifically, developmental and growth delay, hypotonia, lactic acidosis, congenital cataracts, and pancreatitis. Her HIV-positive mother was receiving lamivudine, zidovudine, and nelfinavir mesylate during her pregnancy. The child tested HIV negative after birth. She was found to have a homoplastic T9098C sequence change in the mitochondrial gene coding for adenosine 5'-triphosphate synthase 6 (MTATP6) that was previously reported as a mitochondrial polymorphism. This polymorphism is in the MTATP6 gene-coding sequence and leads to the replacement of a nonpolar amino acid with a polar amino acid. Because of the typical clinical manifestations of mitochondrial disorder and because of the nature of the mitochondrial sequence change, the observed polymorphism likely predisposed this patient to develop severe antiretroviral-associated mitochondrial disease. Mitochondrial sequence alterations may be important factors in mitochondrial toxicity associated with antiretroviral treatment. Mitochondrial sequencing may be warranted in cases of persistent lactic acidosis after antiretroviral prophylaxis to further study this association.
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PMID:Mitochondrial T9098C sequence change in the MTATP6 gene and development of severe mitochondrial disease after in utero antiretroviral prophylaxis. 1994 8


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