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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Type "B" lactic acidosis has been described in patients receiving the nucleoside analogs zidovudine, didanosine, and fialuridine. Lactic acidosis has also been described in 4 patients receiving combination therapy with stavudine and lamivudine. We describe the development of chronic type "B" lactic acidosis in 3 patients receiving stavudine as a single agent and in 2 patients receiving combination therapy with stavudine and either lamivudine or delavirdine, a nonnucleoside analog. All patients presented with abdominal pain, vomiting, and
hepatic steatosis
. Other signs of mitochondrial toxicity included
pancreatitis
and myopathy (2 cases). The mean duration of stavudine therapy was 9.4 months, and the mean observed peak lactate level+/-SD was 10.3+/-5 mmol/L. After discontinuation of stavudine treatment, lactic acidosis improved in 4 patients after 4-60 weeks, and 1 patient died. Evaluations for other causes of lactic acidosis, including hypoxemia, malignancy, sepsis, and cardiogenic shock, were negative.
...
PMID:Lactic acidosis associated with stavudine administration: a report of five cases. 1061 55
Massive hypertriglyceridaemia associated with
fatty liver
and abdominal pain or frank
pancreatitis
(the chylomicronaemia syndrome) is uncommon, but clinically important and under-recognized. It may arise as a result of severe genetic defects in lipolysis or, more commonly, from a moderate primary hypertriglyceridaemia that is exacerbated by a secondary cause. The latter include several drugs, among which the protease inhibitors, used for the treatment of human immunodeficiency virus infection, are increasingly apparent. In the acute situation plasma exchange, fat-free parenteral nutrition and acute insulin treatment, even in nondiabetic persons, may be valuable. A potentially major advance in prophylaxis is the use of high-dose antioxidant therapy, which has been shown to reduce attacks of
pancreatitis
even in the absence of a reduction in serum triglycerides. Asymptomatic patients with abnormal liver function tests are common in the lipid clinic, and can be a difficult group in which to make management decisions. Among those who are not taking excessive amounts of alcohol, many will have nonalcoholic steatohepatitis. The care of these patients is discussed, but there remains considerable uncertainty regarding their optimum management and prognosis.
...
PMID:Serum triglycerides, the liver and the pancreas. 1094 19
Nucleoside analogues represent the cornerstones of antiretroviral regimens. A range of drug- or tissue-specific toxicities, such as peripheral neuropathy, myopathy,
pancreatitis
and lactic acidosis with
hepatic steatosis
, has been documented with these agents. The fat atrophy seen on long term antiretroviral therapy may also be related to nucleoside analogues. The mechanisms by which nucleoside analogues cause toxicity are not clearly established. In vitro, the triphosphates of these agents are weak to modest substrates for human DNA polymerases, showing the greatest affinity for mitochondrial DNA polymerase gamma. Short term exposure in vitro to some nucleoside analogues has been demonstrated to cause increased lactate production or falls in mitochondrial DNA suggestive of mitochondrial toxicity. However, stavudine and to a lesser extent zidovudine are poor substrates for mitochondrial thymidine kinase type 2, the predominant form in cells that are not actively mitotic such as neurons, myocytes and adipocytes. These are the cell types where the proposed mitochondrial toxicities neuropathy, myopathy and lipoatrophy are observed. Thus, active concentrations of phosphorylated products of stavudine and zidovudine may not be present in mitochondria. The familial mitochondrial diseases do not have identical presentations to nucleoside analogue toxicities. These disorders most commonly involve the CNS, typically with seizures or dementia, and occasionally the kidneys. Although nucleoside analogues are known to penetrate the CNS and are commonly renally excreted unchanged, mitochondrial toxicities at these sites have not been documented. Furthermore, toxicity caused by nucleoside or nucleotide analogues does not always appear to arise through the mitochondrial route. Cidofovir appears to cause renal tubular dysfunction via a toxic intracellular metabolite, and zidovudine-related anaemia appears to be related to decreased globin RNA synthesis. In vitro or animal models suggest that zidovudine myopathy, stavudine-related (but not zalcitabine- or didanosine-related) neuropathy and didanosine-related
pancreatitis
may all be not related, or not exclusively related, to mitochondrial dysfunction. The integration of nucleoside analogues into nuclear DNA, best documented with zidovudine but likely to occur with other agents, represents an alternative but potentially delayed pathway to cytotoxicity and cell apoptosis. This is the mechanism of cell death during therapy with antineoplastic nucleoside analogues, and may have contributed to the multisystem toxicities observed with the anti-hepatitis B drug fialuridine. New research evaluating the effects of long term exposure of cell lines is required to address the possibility that nuclear genotoxicity plays a role in long term nucleoside analogue toxicity.
...
PMID:Toxicity of antiretroviral nucleoside and nucleotide analogues: is mitochondrial toxicity the only mechanism? 1114 57
HIV drugs are associated with some very serious and potentially life-threatening conditions. These conditions include
pancreatitis
, lactic acidosis, and an enlarged and/or
fatty liver
. The possible symptoms, laboratory indicators, and treatments for these conditions are described.
...
PMID:Don't let the drugs get you. 1136 54
Since the adoption of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) in the mid-1990s, certain metabolic toxicities have been increasingly recognized. These include a fat redistribution syndrome (lipohypertrophy, lipoatrophy), hyperlipidaemia, altered glucose metabolism and insulin resistance, mitochondrial toxicity (presenting as anaemia, myopathy,
pancreatitis
, neuropathy,
hepatic steatosis
and lactic acidosis), and bone density abnormalities (osteoporosis and osteonecrosis). Metabolic complications are principally reported with protease inhibitors and nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors, but may be seen with all classes of antiretroviral therapy. In this review, we summarize the epidemiology, pathogenesis and management of these various toxicities.
...
PMID:The metabolic toxicities of antiretroviral therapy. 1151 63
Type B lactic acidosis is a rare and often fatal complication seen in patients receiving the nucleotide analogues zidovudine, stavudine, didanosine, and lamivudine. We describe a case of a 51-year-old human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)-positive woman receiving three nucleotide analogues. She presented with nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and
hepatic steatosis
. Signs of mitochondrial toxicity were demonstrated by diffuse myopathy and
pancreatitis
. Serum riboflavin levels documented a deficiency that was treated with 50 mg of riboflavin daily. Immediately after treatment, serum blood urea nitrogen level, lactic acid levels, and arterial blood pH all returned to normal values. Her signs of mitochondrial toxicity also improved after treatment with riboflavin. Successful reversal of the patient's type B lactic acidosis after riboflavin therapy suggested that riboflavin deficiency plays a direct role in the development of nucleotide analogue-induced lactic acidosis. It is impossible to predict which patients are predisposed to the development of this syndrome. For this reason, it may be important to screen and treat riboflavin deficiency in patients on nucleoside analogues.
...
PMID:Emerging role of riboflavin in the treatment of nucleoside analogue-induced type B lactic acidosis. 1178 75
Three categories of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART)-associated major toxic effects have been identified: nucleoside-related toxic effects (e.g., neuropathy, myopathy,
pancreatitis
,
hepatic steatosis
, lactic acidosis, and possibly lipoatrophy), metabolic complications (e.g., fat redistribution, insulin resistance, and hyperlipidemia), and bone disease (e.g., osteopenia and/or osteoporosis). The toxic effects caused by nucleosides are hypothesized to be a result of mitochondrial injury and include myopathy,
pancreatitis
, liver failure, and lactic acidosis. Alterations in lactic acid metabolism range from common instances of asymptomatic lactic acidemia to rare occurrences of life-threatening lactic acidosis with
hepatic steatosis
. A metabolic syndrome consisting of lipodystrophy (i.e., fat redistribution), hyperlipidemia and insulin resistance has been observed, particularly with protease inhibitor treatment. Some additive interaction between protease inhibitors and nucleosides has also been described. The potential relationship of these metabolic abnormalities to increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes has broad implications on long-term patient management. Lipodystrophy associated with HAART is generally accompanied by potentially serious abnormalities, including dyslipidemia (i.e., hypercholesterolemia and hypertriglyceridemia) and altered glucose metabolism (i.e., insulin resistance). Regimens of HAART may have adverse effects on bone metabolism, as indicated by emerging reports of osteopenia, osteoporosis, and avascular necrosis.
...
PMID:Long-term exposure to lifelong therapies. 1183 99
HAART has resulted in dramatic declines in morbidity and mortality among patients infected with HIV. Increased experience with HAART has led to the detection of drug related toxicities that may compromise adherence and necessitate discontinuation of treatment and alteration of otherwise effective regimens. This article considers the major long-term complications associated with nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NRTI) use--hyperlactatemia and lactic acidosis/
hepatic steatosis
, other hepatotoxicities,
pancreatitis
, lipodystrophy, lipoatrophy, neuropathy, and hematologic toxicities. Mechanisms by which NRTIs may produce these effects are discussed, as are differential effects of agents in this class and management options.
...
PMID:Long-term complications of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor therapy. 1274 68
Mitochondrial toxicity has been implicated in the development of a variety of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor-associated syndromes. Mitochondrial damage and decreases in mitochondrial DNA levels have been demonstrated in various tissues of patients treated with NRTIs, especially in conjunction with exposure to stavudine. Clinical syndromes that may be mediated by mitochondrial toxicity include hyperlactatemia and lactic acidosis,
hepatic steatosis
, lipoatrophy, peripheral neuropathy, HIV-associated neuromuscular weakness syndrome,
pancreatitis
, skeletal myopathies, and cardiomyopathy. Early recognition of these syndromes in their mild forms involves close monitoring and a high index of suspicion. This may allow prompt discontinuation of the causative agent(s) and initiation of appropriate therapeutic measures, thereby increasing the chances of reversibility of the syndrome.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial dysfunction: patient monitoring and toxicity management. 1531 67
Advances in anti-retroviral therapy (ART) has led to improved survival of patients infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). ART for HIV patients is composed of a combination of nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors (NRTI) and/or a non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor (NNRTI), and/or a protease inhibitor (PI). The long-term exposure to ART and HIV are causing mitochondrial toxicities, such as myopathies, neuropathy, myelopoiesis,
pancreatitis
, lactic acidosis,
hepatic steatosis
, and lipodystrophy. The mitochondrial pathogenesis has been believed to be due exclusively to NRTI-induced inhibition of DNA polymerase-gamma; it is now apparent that the etiology is far more complex, involving multiple mechanisms as well as an effect by HIV per se. Current therapy for patients includes interruption or change in medications and mitochondrial co-factors.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial dysfunction in AIDS and its treatment. 1612 Apr 31
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