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Query: UMLS:C0030305 (
pancreatitis
)
16,014
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Valproic acid, used alone or in combination with other anticonvulsants in 100 children with epilepsy, improved seizure control in all age groups. Mean improvement in seizure control was 82%. Petit mal seizures responded best, but other types of seizures, even with associated mental and physical handicaps, also responded well. A substantial improvement in alertness and behavior often occurred.
Leukopenia
(27%) and an elevated SGOT value (44%) were frequent but transient. Other side effects included alopecia (1), gastrointestinal distress with vomiting (7),
pancreatitis
(1), thrombocytopenia (1), edema (2), and coma (2). Three severely retarded children with frequent seizures died while receiving valproic acid, but it is not clear that death was caused by valproic acid. Children must be monitored carefully for potential toxic effects, and drug interactions with other anticonvulsants may cause problems in treatment.
...
PMID:Valproic acid therapy in childhood epilepsy. 677 26
The effects of S 16118 (p-guanidobenzoyl-[Hyp3,Thi5,D-Tic7, Oic8]bradykinin (BK)], a new, potent and long-acting BK B2 antagonist, were tested in some in vivo models of inflammation. In rats, S 16118 (0.1 and 1 mg/kg) given i.v. or s.c. delayed the edema formation induced by intraplantar carrageenan injections up to 4 hr after administration, confirming the involvement of kinins in this inflammatory reaction. In guinea pigs treated with atropine, vagal stimulation induced bronchial microvascular leakage. Aerosolization of S 16118 (5 x 10(-3) M for 20 sec), 4 min before vagus nerve stimulation, induced a 60% decrease in the Evans blue extravasation, demonstrating the modulatory role of BK in neurogenic inflammation. In rats, caerulein infusion (4 nmol/kg/hr) induced hypotension, massive pancreatic edema, hypovolemia due to plasma leakage and an increase in serum lipase and amylase activity. S 16118 (100 nmol/kg s.c.) prevented the hypotension, the pancreatic edema and the hypovolemia and induced a marked increase in the serum lipase and amylase activity. This confirms that BK, acting on BK B2 receptors, is involved in this model of
pancreatitis
. In rabbits, the injection of lipopolysaccharides (LPS; 600 micrograms/kg i.v.) induced hypotension, metabolic acidosis and
leukopenia
. S 16118 (1.73 mumol/kg i.v.) did not influence the effects of LPS injection. In mice, i.p. LPS (25 mg/kg) administration induced over 90% mortality in 96 hr. S 16118 (1 mg/kg x 4), given 30 min before LPS injection and 4, 8 and 24 hr after LPS injection, did not influence the mortality rate.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effects of the bradykinin B2 receptor antagonist S 16118 (p-guanidobenzoyl-[Hyp3,Thi5,D-Tic7,Oic8]bradykinin) in different in vivo animal models of inflammation. 779 Oct 78
The didanosine Expanded Access Program was the largest AIDS treatment program to prospectively evaluate the safety of an antiretroviral agent among patients with advanced human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) disease in whom therapy with zidovudine was failing. A total of 21,198 patients who had infections refractory to zidovudine or who were intolerant of the drug received didanosine as a buffered powder for oral solution (sachet), with total daily doses of 6.6-10 mg/kg; the median CD4 lymphocyte count was 0.04 x 10(9)/L for this population. At the currently recommended dose (6.6-8.29 mg/[kg.d]), 6-month estimated rates of
pancreatitis
ranged from 1.2% for patients with AIDS-related complex (ARC) and CD4 lymphocyte counts of > or = 0.1 x 10(9)/L to 6.7% for patients with AIDS and CD4 lymphocyte counts of < 0.05 x 10(9)/L. Laboratory toxicities of World Health Organization grades 3 and 4 developed in fewer than 4% of patients entering the study with normal baseline values; the sole exception was
leukopenia
, which was documented in 8% of these patients. The results of this program demonstrated that patients with CD4 lymphocyte counts of < 0.10 x 10(9)/L or with a diagnosis of AIDS (defined by the 1987 classification system of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) were less tolerant of didanosine and significantly more likely to develop adverse clinical reactions and myelosuppression than other patients.
...
PMID:Rates and risk factors for adverse events associated with didanosine in the expanded access program. 788 37
PHARMACOKINETIC STUDIES. Eleven patients undergoing orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) received mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) orally for prevention of rejection. Additional immunosuppressives used were cyclosporine (CsA) and steroids. Doses ranged from 3.5 to 4.5 g/d. Pharmacokinetic studies were performed between 11 d and 6 months after OLT. The Cmax and Tmax for mycophenolic acid (MPA) were 3.6-35.2 micrograms/mL and 0.5-4 h, respectively, and did not significantly change over 6 months. Oral clearance of MMF (dose of MMF/area under the curve for MPA) between d 11 and d 17 was significantly lower compared with d 21. Biliary diversion did not affect clearance. RESCUE THERAPY. Twenty-three patients with steroid- and OKT3-resistant acute rejection were converted to MMF (2-3.5 g/d) at a mean of 20 wk after OLT. Twenty-one patients responded, 14 with resolution of rejection and 7 with improvement. Sixteen patients remained on the drug. Eight patients had 14 infections, with cytomegalovirus (CMV) being the most common. The most common adverse events were diarrhea (4 patients) and
leukopenia
(3 patients). Four patients with chronic rejection all failed to improve after conversion to MMF. DOSE ESCALATION STUDIES--PRIMARY THERAPY. Seventeen patients received 3.5-5.0 g of MMF per d orally with reduced-dose CsA and prednisone as primary prophylaxis of rejection after OLT. Target CsA levels were 125-175 (whole-blood high-performance liquid chromatography). Two patients were terminated from the study for possible study drug-related reasons:
pancreatitis
in one and unsatisfactory response in the other. Gastrointestinal side effects were the most common (10 patients), including gastritis, esophagitis, and duodenal ulcer. Two patients developed
leukopenia
and/or pancytopenia. Of 5 culture-proven infections, 2 were CMV. After 3 months of follow-up, 7 of 17 patients had no rejection. Of 10 patients with rejection, 7 were treated with pulse steroids and 3 required OKT3. DUAL THERAPY WITH MMF AND STEROIDS. Four patients with rejection and unacceptable toxicity secondary to either CsA or FK-506 were treated with MMF 2-4 g/d and 20 mg of prednisone. After 325-500 d of follow-up, 3 had resolved their rejection episode and 1 had recurrent rejection and was restarted on low-dose CsA. CONCLUSION. MMF is a promising new immunosuppressive agent for both treatment of established rejection and primary rejection prophylaxis after OLT. More studies are needed to define its role further.
...
PMID:Mycophenolate mofetil in liver transplantation. 868 52
The involvement of active oxygen has been suggested in the development of cerulein-induced acute pancreatitis in rats. Previously, we directly detected pancreatic active oxygen (O2-) production in rats with cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
by using a supersensitive photon counter and a cypridina luciferin analogue (MCLA) that reacts specifically with O2- by emitting luminescence. In the present study, with the specific aim of determining the source of O2-, we prepared two groups of animals with cerulein-induced
pancreatitis
: those treated with allopurinol, a xanthine oxidase inhibitor; and those treated with nitrogen mustard, a
leukopenia
-inducing substance. In each of these two groups, pancreatic O2- production and the severity of pancreatic injuries were comparatively studied. In the leukopenic animal group, decreases in O2- dependent chemiluminescence and improvement in the pancreatic condition coincided. This suggests that neutrophils might be involved in experimentally induced
pancreatitis
as a source of active oxygen.
...
PMID:The involvement and sources of active oxygen in experimentally induced acute pancreatitis. 872 Jun 65
Controlled clinical trials in renal transplantation have demonstrated that mycophenolate mofetil is well tolerated and has lower renal transplant rejection rates than azathioprine regimens. This study reports on the clinical experiences at two institutions with mycophenolate mofetil (MMF) for severe lupus nephritis. Twelve patients with relapsing or resistant nephritis previously treated with cyclophosphamide therapy and one patient who refused cyclophosphamide as initial therapy for diffuse proliferative nephritis but accepted MMF were included. During combined MMF/prednisone therapy, serum creatinine values remained normal or declined from elevated values: mean change in serum creatinine was -0.26+/-0.46 microM/L, P = 0.039. Proteinuria significantly decreased: mean change in urine protein-to-creatinine ratios was -2.53+/-3.76, P = 0.039. Decreased serum complement component C3 and elevated anti-double-stranded DNA antibody levels at baseline improved in some, but not all, patients. The mean initial dose of MMF was 0.92 g/d (range, 0.5 to 2 g/d). The mean duration of therapy was 12.9 mo (range, 3 to 24 mo). Adverse events included herpes simplex stomatitis associated with severe
leukopenia
(n = 1), asymptomatic
leukopenia
(n = 2), nausea/ diarrhea (n = 2), thinning of scalp hair (n = 1),
pancreatitis
(n = 1), and pneumonia without
leukopenia
(n = 1). Recurrence of the
pancreatitis
led to discontinuation of MMF in this patient; all other adverse events resolved with dose reduction. It is concluded that MMF is well tolerated and has possible efficacy in controlling major renal manifestations of systemic lupus erythematosus. Controlled clinical trials are needed to define the role of MMF in the management of lupus nephritis.
...
PMID:Mycophenolate mofetil therapy in lupus nephritis: clinical observations. 1020 68
A 22-year-old woman began to have the symptoms of anorexia, high fever, cough and general fatigue from June of 1997. She was admitted in our hospital on Aug. 8th, 1997 for the further detail examination because of pancytopenia and positive antinuclear antibody (ANA). Her laboratory findings and clinical symptoms were compatible with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) such as
leukopenia
, proteinuria, hypocomplementemia, positive ANA, elevated titer of autoantibodies including anti-DNA, anti-Sm, anti-RNP antibodies, polyarthralgia and photosensitivity. The administration of oral prednisolone (40 mg/day) was started on Aug. 15th, 1997 under the diagnosis of SLE. However, she had severe abdominal pain in epigastrium with elevated serum amylase, ascites and dull shape of pancreas tail by CT scan compatible with acute pancreatitis. On Aug. 18th, her general condition was worsening with fever, epigastralgia, abdominal distension, anemia, weak palpation of radial artery, hypotension, tachycardia, shallow breathing and cold sensation on both extremities as shock. In spite of steroid pulse therapy with nafamostat mesilate intraarterial infusion, her condition was not improved. The dose of 50 mg/day of cyclophosphamide was added to the regimen on Aug. 22nd. Then, gradually her condition started to be restored. Anemia,
leukopenia
, hypocomplementemia continued. Second steroid pulse therapy was done on Sep. 5th. After then, she became better in her clinical symptoms and laboratory data. The dose of PSL was tapered to 15 mg/day and 7.5 mg/day update of Oct. 1998 without the pseudcysts found after
pancreatitis
. She is a rare case who recovered from severe acute pancreatitis due to SLE itself.
...
PMID:[A case of systemic lupus erythematosus associated with severe acute pancreatitis]. 1043 57
Lentinan is a beta 1-->3 glucan isolated from Lentinus edodes (Shiitake mushroom) which has immune modulating properties. We have conducted two phase I/II placebo-controlled trials on a total of 98 patients. In one study at the San Francisco General Hospital (SFGH), ten patients each were administered 2, 5, or 10 mg of lentinan or placebo i.v. once a week for eight weeks. In the second study at the Community Research Initiative in New York (CRI), two groups of 20 patients each were administered 1 or 5 mg of lentinan i.v. twice a week for 12 weeks, and ten patients were administered placebo (vehicle containing mannitol plus dextran 40) i.v. twice a week. Entry criteria were an HIV positive test, CD4 levels of 200-500 cells, age 18-60 years, and without current opportunistic infections. This study confirms, in Caucasian subjects also, the good tolerability of lentinan observed in Japanese cancer patients. Side effects were mainly mild, especially when infusion was carried out over a 30-minute period. In the SFGH study, where administration was over a ten minute period, there were nine side effects severe enough to be reported to the FDA (one case each of anaphylactoid reaction, back pain, leg pain, depression, rigor, fever, chills, granulocytopenia and elevated liver enzymes) and there were four patients who discontinued therapy because of side effects. In the CRI study, where infusion was over a 30-minute period, there were no side effects reportable to the FDA and there were four dropouts due to side effects or personal preference. Most side effects resolved promptly after the discontinuation of medication, and all of them were relieved within 24 hours. Patients in the study have shown a trend toward increases in CD4 cells and in some patients neutrophil activity. Because of the small numbers, these values do not have statistical significance. Inasmuch as no side effects such as anemia,
leukopenia
,
pancreatitis
or neuropathy were seen, and in view of the positive effects of lentinan on certain surrogate markers (recognizing that these were small studies), we recommended a long-term clinical trial of lentinan in combination with didanosine (ddI) or zidovudine in HIV positive patients. Most patients in these trials did not have measurable p24 levels. In the CRI trials of ten patients with elevated p24 levels, eight on lentinan and two on placebo had decreased p24 levels. Of these decreases, those with lentinan and one with placebo were marked. These results were provocative and needed confirmation. Subsequent to this study, a trial of lentinan in combination with didanosine (ddI) showed a mean increase of 142 CD4 cells/mm3 over a twelve month period, in contrast to a decrease in CD4 cells in patients on ddI alone (Gordon et al. 1995).
...
PMID:A placebo-controlled trial of the immune modulator, lentinan, in HIV-positive patients: a phase I/II trial. 1050 66
Dideoxynucleosides currently in use for anti-HIV therapy have been found to be inefficient in passing through the blood-brain barrier to enter and maintain therapeutic drug levels in brain, a very significant reservoir of HIV. The low bioavailability of these drugs combined with the bone marrow toxicity of AZT (3'-azido, 3'-deoxythymidine, Zidovudine), resulting in anemia and
leukopenia
,
pancreatitis
with ddI (2',3'-dideoxyinosine, Didanosine) and painful peripheral neuropathy in case of ddC (2',3-dideoxycytosine, Zalcitabine) are the limiting factors in their use. In addition, the emergence of strains of HIV resistant to AZT, the most commonly used drug, further restricts its use. Thus the control of AIDS and its complications, needs special therapeutic approaches to combat the disease. In order to overcome these limitations, AZT and ddI have been synthesized as ester-linked ceramide- and phosphatidylcholine-linked prodrugs possessing therapeutic attributes lacking in the parent compounds. There is greater uptake and longer retention of these prodrugs in NIH/3T3 cells in vitro. Pretreatment with our prodrugs blocked infection of these cells by Moloney murine leukemia virus (M-MuLV) for an extended period, which the parent drugs failed to do. When human CD4+ HeLa cells were continuously exposed to the AZT prodrug, subsequent infection of these cells by HIV was blocked. Similar results were obtained with NIH/3T3 cells exposed to M-MuLV. AE(6)C, a prodrug of AZT linked to ceramide via a cleavable ester bond and a six carbon linker, was less toxic to both mouse and human bone marrow progenitor cells than free AZT. Most significantly, the prodrugs concentration was greater and the retention longer, in well known sanctuaries for HIV, such as the brain, testes and thymus.
...
PMID:Improved uptake and retention of lipophilic prodrug to improve treatment of HIV. 1083 73
6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) and azathioprine (AZA) are used to treat inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Side effects include infection,
leukopenia
, hepatitis, and
pancreatitis
. The level of thiopurine methyltransferase (TPMT), which metabolizes 6-MP to 6-methylmercaptopurine, may reflect the risk of side effects. We sought to evaluate the relationship between the side effects of these medications and the TPMT level of pediatric patients with IBD. The medical records of our patients who were diagnosed with IBD and who received 6-MP or AZA were reviewed for measured TPMT levels. All red blood cell (RBC) TPMT levels were determined at the Mayo Medical Laboratories, Rochester, MN. The occurrence of
leukopenia
, elevated aminotransferases, and
pancreatitis
was evaluated. Twenty-two patients, mean age 13.7 years, received 6-MP or AZA and had TPMT levels measured. The TPMT levels ranged 10.7-27.5 U/mL RBC with a mean of 17.2 +/- 3.2 U/mL RBC. Two children had levels below the accepted norm of 13.8 U/mL RBC. One of these patients (50%) developed both elevation of aminotransferases and
leukopenia
. Of all, 20 children had normal levels, 3 (15.0%) exhibited side effects: hepatitis (n = 2) and
leukopenia
(n = 1). We conclude that side effects of 6-MP or AZA occur despite normal TPMT levels.
...
PMID:Normal thiopurine methyltransferase levels do not eliminate 6-mercaptopurine or azathioprine toxicity in children with inflammatory bowel disease. 1087 70
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