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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (
pneumonia
)
54,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 32-year-old man developed a rash on his body and extremities following acute fever of a few days duration, and also noticed pain and spontaneous tingling sensations in his lower extremities. Because severe
pneumonia
with dyspnea and low arterial blood oxygen concentration were found on examination, he was admitted and treated. After recovering from
pneumonia
in two months, he complained of abdominal symptoms, such as constipation,
nausea and vomiting
, spontaneous tingling sensations in the lower extremities, and orthostatic dizziness and fainting. On neurological examination, a mild to moderate muscle weakness was found in the distal muscles of both extremities. The ankle jerk was absent. Both superficial and deep sensations were moderately to severely decreased in the feet with positive Romberg's sign. Constipation and vomiting with nausea were noted. Clinical and laboratory examinations revealed marked orthostatic hypotension and hypohidrosis. Motor and sensory conduction studies indicated the presence of axonal degeneration and segmental demyelination and remyelination in the limbs nerves. CSF examination indicated that protein was 150 mg/dl and the cell count to be 18/mm3. Titer of antibody to rubella virus was significantly elevated. There were no other abnormalities to indicate the cause of motor, sensory and autonomic neuropathies. Therefore, the diagnosis of acute polyradiculoneuropathy with autonomic disturbances after rubella infection, which is rare in the literature, was made.
...
PMID:[A case of acute polyradiculoneuropathy with autonomic disturbances following rubella infection]. 826 90
The oral third-generation cephalosporin cefetamet pivoxil has a broad spectrum of antibacterial activity and favorable pharmacokinetic properties which makes it particularly suitable for the treatment of upper and lower respiratory tract infections as well as of infections of the urinary tract. The clinical trial results of cefetamet pivoxil have been reviewed from the literature in 4,112 patients out of whom 3,128 patients were treated with cefetamet pivoxil. The standard doses of cefetamet pivoxil, 500 mg twice daily in adults and 10 mg/kg twice daily in children, were at least as effective and in many cases clinically superior to most currently recommended antibiotics for the treatment of complicated urinary tract infections including pyelonephritis. High efficacy has also been demonstrated in patients with
pneumonia
, in acute exacerbation of chronic bronchitis and infections of the ear, nose and throat. Clinical trial results have shown that a 7-day treatment period with cefetamet pivoxil is as effective as a 10-day course of phenoxymethylpenicillin in the treatment of pharyngotonsillitis due to group A beta-hemolytic streptococci. Cefetamet pivoxil was well tolerated: 226 patients (7.2%) out of 3,128 had adverse events which were mainly gastrointestinal, i.e. diarrhea,
nausea and vomiting
. An additional 53 (1.7%) patients had laboratory changes which were of no clinical relevance. Premature treatment withdrawals were reported in 13 (0.5%) out of 2,612 adults and in 11 (2.1%) out of 516 children. All adverse events subsided rapidly after treatment. Many current antibiotic treatment regimens require the administration of three daily doses. However, twice daily standard doses of cefetamet pivoxil of 500 mg in adults or 10 mg/kg in children provide unbound plasma concentrations of cefetamet which generally exceed the MIC90 for susceptible organisms between doses and are clinically effective, well tolerated and should result in good compliance.
...
PMID:Literature survey on clinical efficacy and tolerability on cefetamet pivoxil: an analysis of 3,128 cases. 848 90
We have evaluated escalating doses of paclitaxel (Taxol; Bristol-Myers Squibb Company, Princeton, NJ) in combination with carboplatin, cisplatin, etoposide, and concurrent thoracic radiotherapy in patients with stage III non-small cell lung cancer. Dose-limiting toxicity was observed at paclitaxel 90 mg/m2. Subsequent modifications resulted in a new regimen, which consists of a 3-hour paclitaxel infusion on day 1 (three dose levels: 80, 100, and 120 mg/m2), etoposide 40 mg/m2 intravenously over 1 hour daily on days 2 to 5, and carboplatin given at an area under the concentration-time curve of 4 mg/mL x min on day 1 after paclitaxel. Treatment courses were repeated every 28 days. Eleven patients considered eligible for surgery received two courses. Nonsurgical patients (five) received three courses. No episodes of grade > or = 3
nausea and vomiting
, dermatitis, anorexia, esophagitis, or thrombocytopenia were observed. The dose-limiting toxicity (grade 4 granulocytopenia) occurred in three of five patients at 120 mg/m2 paclitaxel (level 3). Grade 3 radiation
pneumonitis
was observed in three patients. Nine patients have undergone pulmonary resection: four pneumonectomies, four lobectomies, and one segmental resection. No operative deaths, respiratory insufficiency, or cardiovascular complications were observed. Clinical partial remissions have been observed in 11 of 16 patients overall, and two histologic complete remissions were achieved in nine surgical patients. Our preliminary results show that pulmonary resection is feasible following treatment with radiation and concurrent paclitaxel-containing chemotherapy. Although the maximum tolerated paclitaxel dose in the present study was relatively low, favorable initial responses warrant further study of paclitaxel-containing combination chemotherapy and concurrent radiation. We next plan to delete etoposide from our chemoradiotherapy regimen and escalate the paclitaxel dose.
...
PMID:Escalating paclitaxel doses combined with carboplatin/etoposide and thoracic radiotherapy as preoperative or definitive treatment for stage III non-small cell lung cancer. 900 34
We report the results of treatment of 9 patients with advanced multiple myeloma (MM) using half-body irradiation. Six nonresponders to chemotherapy received it as consolidation therapy after the plateau phase of MM had been observed, and 4 patients received it as salvage therapy of refractory or relapsing MM. One of the patients received it twice, first as consolidation and later during the course of her disease also as salvage therapy. Objective response was obtained in 1 of 6 patients who received half-body irradiation as consolidation therapy and in 3 of 4 patients who received it as salvage therapy. Responders to half-body irradiation generally achieved a longer relapse-free interval. Treatment with half-body irradiation was especially effective in combination with human leukocyte interferon as salvage therapy in 2 of the patients with refractory MM, leading to a relapse-free interval of more than 27 months in one of them. Symptomatic relief was observed in 5 of 6 patients. All had transient post-irradiation pancytopenia, with
pneumonitis
,
nausea and vomiting
observed in those who had the upper half of the body irradiated first. It is thus our opinion that halfbody irradiation should not be used as consolidation therapy in nonresponders to chemotherapy, because it causes undue toxicity to heavily pretreated patients. Its role in the treatment of refractory or relapsing MM in combination with human leukocyte interferon should be fully evaluated.
...
PMID:Half-body irradiation in the treatment of multiple myeloma: a report of nine cases. 906 Oct 70
In a multicenter phase II study, 30 patients with unresectable, locally advanced or metastatic squamous cell or adenocarcinoma of the esophagus were treated with folinic acid 200 mg/m2/d, 5-FU 300 mg/m2/d, and cisplatin 20 mg/m2/d intravenously for 5 days every 4 weeks. Two of 13 patients with squamous cell carcinoma (SCC) had a complete response (CR), but one died of
pneumonia
after 9 months while still in CR, and the other still in CR after more than 5 years. Six other patients (3 SCC, 2 of 16 with adenocarcinoma, 1 mixed histology) had a partial response with a median duration of 9 months (range 5 to 57 + months) for an overall response rate of 27%. A further 6 patients (20%) had stable disease. Grade 4 neutropenia occurred in 6 patients (20%), with 5 requiring antibiotics for associated fever. Other grade 4 toxicities were
nausea and vomiting
(1), anemia (1), and thrombocytopenia (1); there were three early deaths (emphysema, cardiac arrest, pulmonary embolism). This combination appears to be an active, convenient regimen for advanced esophageal cancer, resulting in prolonged remission and survival in some patients.
...
PMID:Outpatient 5-fluorouracil, folinic acid and cisplatin in patients with advanced esophageal carcinoma. 1022 49
Resistance may be classified as active (or competitive) (due to excess amount of a factor) vs passive (or non-competitive) (due to a deficiency of a factor). Passive resistance may be important in human solid tumors. In passive resistance, the dose-response curve may be shallow, or may flatten at a relatively low dose. We hypothesized that, if passive resistance were important, it might be advantageous to use low doses of multiple concurrent chemotherapy agents with differing mechanisms of action, rather than using high doses of 2 or 3 drugs. We combined single day cisplatin 60 mg/m2, cyclophosphamide 250 mg/m2, epirubicin 40 mg/m2, paclitaxel 60 mg/m2, and vinblastine 2.5 mg/m2, with 5 days of 5-fluorouracil 200 mg/m2, folinic acid 20 mg/m2 and dexamethasone 4 mg orally q.i.d. every 3 weeks. In later cohorts, doses were escalated, and tamoxifen and verapamil were added. Twenty-three patients were entered. ECOG performance status was 1 in 15 patients and 2 in 8. Number of prior chemotherapy regimens was 0 in 4 patients, 1 in 4, 2 in 8, 3 in 4, 4 in 2, and 7 in 1. Sixteen patients had prior radiotherapy, and 3 had no prior therapy. Myelosuppression and febrile neutropenia were frequent, and 4 heavily pretreated patients died of
pneumonia
contracted while neutropenic. Diarrhea,
nausea and vomiting
, and fatigue were also prominent. Among 9 patients with non-small cell lung cancer, one had a partial remission, 4 had stable disease (including 3 with minor objective responses). Two additional non-small cell lung cancer patients also had objective tumor regression, but were coded as failures, since one had tumor progression in <6 weeks and the other died of respiratory failure (thought to be due to severe mucous plugging) one week after his first course of treatment. Among 14 patients with other tumor types, there was one partial response (esophageal carcinoma), 6 patients with stable disease for >6 weeks (including minor responses in one patient each with adenocarcinomas of kidney and breast), and 7 failures (including one patient with adenocarcinoma unknown primary who had minor tumor regression lasting 4 weeks). Despite the unacceptably high toxic death rate, median survival time was 24 weeks (range, 1 week to >104 weeks). This regimen is toxic, but survival duration is longer than would be expected in this heavily pre-treated population. Doses recommended for further study are those used in the first treatment cohort (as described above). Since myelosuppression is the major toxic effect, hemopoietic growth factors might prove helpful with this regimen.
...
PMID:Concurrent use of multiple low dose chemotherapy agents with differing mechanisms of action as a strategy vs passive resistance: A pilot study. 1049 50
Dose-escalation study was performed to evaluate the maximum tolerated dose, recommended dose and toxicity profile of weekly irinotecan with daily carboplatin and concurrent thoracic radiotherapy in patients with locally advanced non-small-cell lung cancer. Thirty-one previously untreated patients with unresectable stage III non-small-cell lung cancer were enrolled in this study. Patients received weekly irinotecan plus carboplatin (20 mg x m(-2) daily for 5 days a week) for 4 weeks and thoracic radiotherapy (60 Gy in 30 fractions). The irinotecan dose was escalated from 30 mg x m(-2) in increments of 10 mg x m(-2). Four irinotecan dose levels were given and 30 patients were assessable. Their median age was 62 years (range: 52-72 years), 28 had a performance status of 0-1 and two had a performance status of 2, 12 had stage IIIA disease and 18 had IIIB disease. There were 19 squamous cell carcinomas, 10 adenocarcinomas, and one large cell carcinoma. The dose-limiting toxicities were
pneumonitis
, esophagitis, thrombocytopenia and neutropenia. The maximum tolerated dose of irinotecan was 60 mg x m(-2), with two patients developing grade 4 pulmonary toxicity and one patient died of
pneumonitis
(grade 5). The recommended dose of irinotecan was 50 mg x m(-2). Other grade 3 or 4 toxicities were
nausea and vomiting
. Three patients achieved complete remission and 15 had partial remission, for an objective response rate of 60.0%. The median survival time was 14.9 months, and the 1- and 2-year survival rates were 51.6% and 34.2%, respectively. The study concluded that the major toxicity of this regimen was
pneumonitis
. This therapy may be active against unresectable non-small-cell lung cancer and a phase II study is warranted.
...
PMID:Dose-escalation study of weekly irinotecan and daily carboplatin with concurrent thoracic radiotherapy for unresectable stage III non-small cell lung cancer. 1217 91
Based on past information from the literature and our own review, it appears that imipenem can be used effectively as an initial empirical therapy of febrile neutropenia, as a monotherapy, even in patients with haematological malignancies. The response rate is outstanding in microbiologically documented infections, namely bacteraemias, although more information is needed about its optimal use when
pneumonia
is present. There is no logical or medicine-based evidence suggesting that imipenem should be reserved for second line therapy in patients with febrile neutropenia not responding to empirical treatments that did not contain imipenem. A lower dose of imipenem (500 mg every 6 h) is probably as effective and definitely better tolerated, than higher doses, especially as far as
nausea and vomiting
are concerned.
...
PMID:Use of imipenem as empirical treatment of febrile neutropenia. 1272 70
High-dose chemotherapy (HD-CT) has a role in the potentially curative treatment of several tumours. The relative efficacies of the different regimens have not been studied in comparative trials, but it is clear that toxicities differ significantly between them. We analysed the immediate and long-term toxicity in the first 100 consecutive patients treated with the CTC regimen (cyclophosphamide 6000 mg m(-2), carboplatin 1600 mg m(-2) (or 20 mg ml(-1) min under the curve (AUC)) both as daily 1 h infusion, thiotepa 480 mg m(-2) as twice daily 30 min infusion, all divided over 4 consecutive days) followed by peripheral blood progenitor cell reinfusion (PBPC-Tx). Most patients had high-risk (n=86) or metastatic (n=4) breast cancer, or a germ cell tumour (n=8). Two patients (with a medulloblastoma and an aesthesioneuroblastoma, respectively) received CTC as off-protocol salvage regimen. The main toxicity was bone marrow suppression. Most patients had PBPC-Tx with granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF), and the median time to neutrophil count 500 x 10(6) l(-1) and platelet count >20 x 10(9) l(-1) without transfusion independence was 10 (range 8-25) and 13 (8-60) days, respectively. The toxic death rate was 1%. Other frequent toxicities were neutropenic fever requiring antibiotics (n=65), central catheter-related infection (n=12) or a bleeding episode (n=48), mostly epistaxis (n=26). Reversible cardiac toxicity was seen in six patients and pulmonary events occurred in seven patients (infection (n=6), embolism (n=1)). Grade 3-4 gastrointestinal toxicity was frequent:
nausea and vomiting
55%, diarrhoea 28% and mild liver toxicity (transaminase elevations) 9%. One patient pretreated with cisplatin had a kidney transplantation 8 years after HD-CT. Late complications included reversible radiation
pneumonitis
(n=12) and chronic heart failure (n=2). We found five second solid malignancies and two myelodysplasias. In conclusion, the CTC regimen is associated with a moderate, mainly reversible, toxicity. Future studies need to compare the efficacy and toxicity of the different HD-CT regimens.
...
PMID:Toxicity of the high-dose chemotherapy CTC regimen (cyclophosphamide, thiotepa, carboplatin): the Netherlands Cancer Institute experience. 1279 23
Amifostine (Ethyol, WR-2721; MedImmune, Inc, Gaithersburg, MD) is a member of a sulfhydryl-containing class of compounds that protects normal tissue and organs against ionizing radiation damage by scavenging radiation-induced radicals. The goal of this study was to assess the preclinical and clinical data on the protective effect of amifostine in normal organs and tissue. The current literature was reviewed and assessed for progress in the pathogenesis of radiation-induced pulmonary injury. Preclinical and clinical data on the protective effect of amifostine in radiation-induced lung and esophageal injuries were also critically assessed. Significant progress has been made in understanding the pathogenesis of radiation
pneumonitis
. Preclinical studies have shown strong evidence of the protective effect of amifostine in radiation-induced toxicities in rodents and monkeys. However, available clinical data are not conclusive in showing the protective effect of amifostine in radiation
pneumonitis
and esophagitis. Amifostine has been well tolerated with a low incidence of toxicities, which included
nausea and vomiting
(3% to 5%) and transient hypotension during intravenous infusion (7%). Preclinical data are promising for amifostine in protecting thoracic organs from radiation-induced toxicities. Studies measuring the magnitude of gain in tumor control and survival as a result of the enhanced protective effect of amifostine on normal tissue over that of tumor tissue are lacking. Such data would help in designing new approaches to maximize outcome. Additional well-designed phase III studies are necessary to confirm the clinical benefit of amifostine in minimizing radiation- and chemoradiation-related toxicities in patients with lung cancer.
...
PMID:Radioprotective effect of amifostine in radiation pneumonitis. 1472 36
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