Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030567 (Parkinson's disease)
63,064 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The atoll community of Fenuafala was surveyed during July-August, 1987. A disproportionate demographic structure was found: There was a large, young population with an uneven sex distribution in the adolescent cohorts. Adoption of relatives was frequent. Employment varied according to sex, with women restricted from horticulture, fisheries, and hard labour. The use of alcohol and tobacco was common. Causes of mortality included cancer, heart failure, meningitis, alcoholism, and accidents. Bacterial and fungal skin infections were prevalent. There were several cases of congenital disorders. Malaria, leprosy, and most other tropical diseases were absent. However, there was a single case of filariasis. Musculoskeletal disorders were numerous and more common among women. Falls from trees have resulted in serious sequelae including epilepsy and death. Hypertension, diabetes, and gout appear to be on the increase, but angina and myocardial infarction were not reported. There were also cases of epilepsy and Parkinson's disease.
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PMID:Fenuafala health survey: the ecology of health and disease on a coral atoll village. 280 43

Previous short-term studies have shown that the dopamine agonist pergolide improves control of Parkinson's disease when used in conjunction with carbidopa-levodopa (Sinemet). We assessed the long-term outcome (2 1/2- to 3-year follow-up) in patients with Parkinson's disease who participated in our previous pergolide double-blind trial and were subsequently switched to open-label pergolide therapy. Of 41 evaluable patients who began pergolide therapy, 10 (24%) experienced sustained substantial benefit that persisted to the end of this investigation. A total of 23 patients (56%) remained on pergolide therapy and, as a group, had considerable improvement over baseline at 2 1/2 to 3 years on the basis of several measurements of efficacy. A tendency toward deterioration could be reversed in many patients by larger or more frequent doses of carbidopa-levodopa; nevertheless, all but four patients were still taking the same dose or less of carbidopa-levodopa at the end of this study as at the onset. Patients with the best initial response to pergolide seemed most likely to experience long-term benefit. Confusion and hallucinations were the side effects most likely to necessitate discontinuation of pergolide. Symptoms suggestive of dose-related angina pectoris occurred in four patients in the open-label phase and two patients in the earlier double-blind phase (13% of patients who started pergolide therapy); these symptoms were easily controlled by dose reduction or discontinuation of pergolide, without sequelae. Dose-related leukopenia developed in one patient.
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PMID:Pergolide: long-term use in Parkinson's disease. 305 Mar 1

Thirty-six patients with Parkinson's disease, on levodopa, were admitted to a double-blind, parallel, 40-week study of adjunct bromocriptine in dosages increased by 2.5 mg every 4 weeks. A 37% improvement of the mean neurologic deficit score was obtained at the maximal daily dosage of 20 mg. Improvement was greatest in patients with mild disease. The wearing-off effect, off-dose abnormal involuntary movements, and leg pains, associated with levodopa, improved in over 70% of patients at an average dosage of 13 mg. Only 15% of patients had adverse reactions severe enough to necessitate discontinuance of the drug. Abnormalities of mental state were less severe than expected, but two patients had exacerbations of angina pectoris.
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PMID:Low dosages of bromocriptine added to levodopa in Parkinson's disease. 396 7

A patient with severe variant angina that was refractory to conventional treatment became symptom free when she was treated with benzhexol (trihexyphenidyl hydrochloride), a cholinergic blocking agent used in the management of Parkinson's disease. There was a brief psychotic reaction when a large dose was taken and some memory impairment on the maintenance dose. Benzhexol should be used with caution but may prove to be an additional therapeutic agent in the management of severe variant angina.
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PMID:Management of a case of refractory variant angina with benzhexol hydrochloride (trihexyphenidyl hydrochloride). 405 85

In this cohort study, 16,911 men who had completed a mailed dietary questionnaire were followed for 11 1/2 years with 721 deaths reported from ischemic heart disease (IHD) (excluding those reporting on the questionnaire a prior history of angina or other heart conditions). Although no association was found between coffee consumption and mortality from IHD, a negative association between coffee consumption and mortality from diseases other than IHD was found. This negative association, found exclusively in the first four years of follow-up, was observed in deaths from digestive diseases, other than malignancies, and paralysis agitans, which made the greatest contribution to this observed negative association. The negative association appeared to reflect a reduction in coffee consumption related to the disorders in question and not to a protective effect of coffee. It has been suggested that the positive association between coffee consumption and IHD reported in some case-control studies may reflect a decreased consumption among controls rather than an unusually high consumption among cases.
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PMID:Coffee consumption and mortality from ischemic heart disease and other causes: results from the Lutheran Brotherhood study, 1966-1978. 723 54

In the Rotterdam Study, prevalence and determinants of chronic diseases in the elderly (age > or = 55 years), were investigated in inhabitants of Ommoord, a suburb of Rotterdam. The study focused on cardiac diseases (myocardial infarction, angina pectoris, cardiovascular risk factors), glaucoma, macular degeneration, osteoporosis, osteoarthrosis and invalidity, dementia (Alzheimer's disease, vascular dementia, Parkinson's disease), epilepsy, cerebrovascular accident. The number of participants was 7983 (3105 men, 4878 women), a response of 78%. The participants were interviewed and were twice examined in an out-patient clinic. The results will be described in subsequent issues of this journal.
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PMID:[Prevalence of chronic diseases in the elderly; the ERGO study (Erasmus Rotterdam Health and the Elderly)]. 747 40

The view that the era of modern medicine began with the introduction of the sulfonamides is supported by a standard textbook of pharmacology that refers to the years 1908-35 as being characterized by "therapeutic nihilism". However, a survey of several sources listing some of the treatments then available yields 15 infectious, 7 deficiency and 3 endocrine disorders amenable to cure. In addition, palliation that even today would be considered rational could be given for congestive heart failure, angina pectoris, asthma, epilepsy, migraine, and Parkinson's disease, to mention only a few. A total of 38 surgical, pharmacological, nutritional and physical remedies were identified, many of them still in use. These findings represent a minimum estimate as the review was not exhaustive, being aimed chiefly at recapturing the therapeutic atmosphere prevailing 75 years ago. Nothing in the textbooks of medicine, pharmacology and treatment suggests that physicians of the 1920's lacked either the means or the enthusiasm for treating their patients.
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PMID:Therapeutic nihilism? 860 44

From October 1995 until April 1996. CABG (coronary artery bypass grafting) was performed under the beating heart without CPB (cardiopulmonary bypass) in nine cases. They consisted of 7 males and 2 females ranging in age from 31 to 79 years old (mean 64.7 years). Single bypass grafting was performed in 6 cases, and double bypass grafting was done in 3 cases, involving 2 re-do cases. With regard to the major associated diseases, two patients had required chronic hemodialysis three time a week, four patients were administered with insulin for diabetes mellitus. There were other three patients with renal dysfunction not requiring hemodialysis, two patients had pulmonary problems, and one patient had Parkinson's disease. Further more two patients were older than 75th years in age. Graft anastomosis to the coronary artery was performed with 7-0 polypropylene. In one case, left thoracotomy was done to approach the heart for the anastomosis to intermediate artery, and in the other eight cases, median sternotomy was done. The grafts used in the nine cases were 4 right internal thoracic arteries, 6 left internal thoracic arteries, one gastroepiploic artery and one saphenous vein, 12 grafts in total. Subtotal gastrectomy for gastric cancer and cholecystectomy for cholecystitis was done in one patient for each. Heterologous blood transfusion was required two cases (22.2%). The postoperative course was very good in all cases. Eleven grafts in postoperative angiographed 8 cases were all patent, although presenting the string sign in one case, and angina pectoris disappeared in all cases. CABG under the beating heart without CPB was considered to be useful for the patients with considerable other diseases from the point of view of safety and ease of postoperative managements. We think that this procedure should be considered particularly for patients on chronic hemodialysis who required CABG.
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PMID:[Coronary artery bypass grafting without cardiopulmonary bypass]. 907 Nov 30

During the period from July 1995 to June 1996 we performed transurethral resection of the prostate (TURP) on 824 patients with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH). Among them, 13 were dementia patients between 74 and 96 years old; they presented with urinary hesitancy in 6, retention in 4, frequency in 2 and incontinence in 1 patient. Past history included stroke in 7, hypertension in 6, pulmonary tuberculosis in 4, diabetes in 3, asthma in 2, angina pectoris in 1, Parkinson's disease in 1, pneumonia in 1, and hepatitis in 1. Careful preoperative examination revealed that they were proper candidates for TURP. They underwent TURP under spinal anesthesia. The mean operative time was 34 min, ranging from 20 to 60 min. The adenoma resected weighed 24 g on the average, ranging from 7.5 to 48 g. During surgery, although hypotension was noted in 2 patients, there was no serious morbidity. Their mental condition was well controlled with ketamine and diazepam during and after surgery. Postoperative complications included acute myocardial infarction in 1, multiple gastric ulcer in 1, and decubitus in 1. None died within 3 months after TURP, 3 died there after, and 10 patients were alive at the mean follow-up period of 26 months. Six patients reported good urination, 3 reported some improvement in urination after surgery, although requiring intermittent catheterization and 1 developed mild incontinence. In conclusion, TURP appears to provide some benefit in selected patients with dementia and should not be considered to be a contraindication for such patients.
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PMID:[Transurethral resection of the prostate for patients with dementia]. 1036 42

Spinal cord or thalamic deep brain stimulation with a pacemaker is becoming more important in the treatment of drug refractory pain due to peripheral vascular disease, angina pectoris and intractable tremor in patients with neurologic disorders such as Parkinson's disease. An additional indication for a cardiac pacemaker or implantable cardioverter defibrillator raises concerns about possible interactions between the implanted electrical devices. We report on a patient with existing spinal cord stimulation who survived sudden cardiac death and received a dual chamber cardioverter defibrillator capable of delivering tiered therapies in both the atrium and ventricle.
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PMID:Potential device interaction of a dual chamber implantable cardioverter defibrillator in a patient with continuous spinal cord stimulation. 1475 38


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