Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Furazolidone and nitrofurantoin, oral nitrofuran derivatives with broad-spectrum antimicrobial properties already in clinical use, were compared for activity against Pneumocystis carinii in an immunosuppressed rat model of P. carinii pneumonia. Furazolidone exhibited only slight activity as a prophylactic agent but was moderately effective in the therapy of pneumocystosis. The median histologic score and organism count fell from 4+ and 10(8) to 10(9) cysts per lung, respectively, in the controls to 1+ to 2+ and 10(7) to 10(8) cysts per lung, respectively, in the furazolidone-treated groups. However, these results were not as good as those obtained with the standard drug, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (0+, 10(6) to 10(7) cysts per lung). Nitrofurantoin showed little anti-P. carinii activity despite different doses or drug preparations. The high doses of furazolidone used here and their toxic effects on the rats will probably discourage investigation of this drug in the treatment of pneumocystosis in humans. Nevertheless, since many nitrofurans have been synthesized, further exploration of this class of compounds might be helpful in developing new anti-P. carinii agents or in studying structure-activity relationships.
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PMID:Furazolidone and nitrofurantoin in the treatment of experimental Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia. 201 71

Nitrofurantoin is widely used in the prophylaxis and treatment of urinary tract infections. Most untoward side-effects are mild and due to gastrointestinal intolerance. More severe side-effects consist of acute and chronic pulmonary reactions, liver damage, blood dyscrasias and peripheral neuropathy. Nitrofurantoin is a rare cause of hepatic injury, with a spectrum of toxic reactions ranging from acute, self-limited, hepatocellular or cholestatic injury to chronic active hepatitis. We present a case of acute hepatic injury and pneumonitis related to nitrofurantoin. When this drug is given periodic clinical and laboratory monitoring is important.
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PMID:[Acute hepatitis and pneumonitis associated with nitrofurantoin]. 207 65

Nitrofurantoin may be used for prophylaxis of recurrent urinary tract infections in women; however, this agent has been associated with acute, subacute, and chronic pulmonary adverse reactions. The acute reaction occurs in about 1/5,000 women after their first exposure to the drug. We report the occurrence of two successive, highly probable (by Naranjo score) nitrofurantoin-induced acute pulmonary reactions in the same patient. On day 4 of prophylaxis with nitrofurantoin 100 mg/day (to prevent urinary tract infections), the patient developed intense substernal pain and pressure. On day 8, she experienced intense substernal burning. She went to the emergency department, where she vomited and was hypotensive and febrile. Her chest radiograph showed bilateral infiltrates. The patient was diagnosed with pneumonia and was prescribed levofloxacin; she stopped taking the nitrofurantoin. Her symptoms subsided over the next 3 days. Ten days later, the patient restarted the nitrofurantoin, and she returned to the emergency department after again experiencing sudden intense substernal burning, nausea, vomiting, shivering, and weakness. Nitrofurantoin was discontinued; her symptoms resolved quickly, and prophylaxis with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole was begun. After 1 year, the patient had experienced no further pulmonary symptoms or urinary tract infections. Drug toxicity must be considered in patients who develop pulmonary symptoms while taking nitrofurantoin. Symptoms are often misdiagnosed as other ailments, potentially subjecting patients to unnecessary treatments and delaying discontinuation of nitrofurantoin. Patients should be advised to contact a physician if breathing difficulties or unusual symptoms develop while taking nitrofurantoin, as this could result in earlier recognition of this drug reaction.
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PMID:Recurrent acute nitrofurantoin-induced pulmonary toxicity. 1671 46

We present the case of a patient referred to the gastroenterology service for investigation of abnormal liver function tests. She had been taking nitrofurantoin for 16 months as prophylaxis against urinary tract infections. CT scan showed evidence of lung pneumonitis and low attenuation in the liver parenchyma. Nitrofurantoin-induced pneumonitis and hepatotoxicity was diagnosed. The patient responded both clinically and biochemically to withdrawal of nitrofurantoin. This combination of adverse reaction to nitrofurantoin is rare.
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PMID:Nitrofurantoin-induced lung- and hepatotoxicity. 1751 37

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common pathological entity among elderly patients. The widespread use of antibiotics for uncomplicated UTIs has gained many opponents mainly due to the increasing drug resistance observed. Nitrofurantoin is a commonly used antibacterial drug because it has low side effects and a good antiurinary bacterial profile. However, in this paper, we present a case of a nitrofurantoin-induced DRESS (drug reaction/rash with eosinophilia and systemic symptoms) syndrome in a 77-year-old woman. During UTI treatment, the patient developed an acute skin rash which spread all over the body and a considerable decrease in urine volume. At the emergency department, we found her developing eosinophilic pneumonia, anaemia and renal impairment that we relate to nitrofurantoin administration. To our knowledge, this is the second published case report which evokes nitrofurantoin as a possible cause of DRESS syndrome.
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PMID:Nitrofurantoin: cause of DRESS syndrome. 2366 54

A 70-year-old woman presented with progressive skin lesions on the face, limbs and trunk in the absence of systemic illness. Three months earlier, she had been prescribed six months prophylactic nitrofurantoin for recurrent urinary tract infections, treated with nitrofurantoin and trimethoprim. Positive immunology and histological inflammatory changes in a skin biopsy were consistent with a diagnosis of sub-acute cutaneous lupus erythematosus. Following treatment with topical steroids, the skin lesions regressed, but alopecia followed and required hydroxychloroquine. One year later, there are no new skin lesions and no evidence of systemic lupus erythematosus. Nitrofurantoin is associated with many side effects and hypersensitivity reactions. Possible drug-induced lupus reactions due to nitrofurantoin include pneumonitis, blood disorders and hepatotoxicity. This is the only published case of isolated sub-acute cutaneous lupus following maintenance nitrofurantoin.
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PMID:Sub-acute cutaneous lupus erythematosus following nitrofurantoin: causative or coincidental? 2534 83

Nitrofurantoin has well-described associations with a range of adverse pulmonary effects. We report the case of a 72-year old woman with relapsing pneumonitis secondary to the intermittent use of nitrofurantoin, a pattern of disease not well-represented in the literature. The case is also noteworthy as the diagnosis was initially overlooked due to the circumstances of the patient's medication use. Lung biopsy was avoided by detailed history taking.
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PMID:Relapsing nitrofurantoin-induced pneumonitis. 2605 60

Nitrofurantoin-induced diffuse lung toxicity is well documented in the literature but is often misdiagnosed. We describe an 82-year-old female medicated with nitrofurantoin for the previous 2 years who was admitted for dyspnoea, dry cough and fatigue for 4 months. She was febrile and tachypnoeic and she presented with bilateral basal crackles, hypoxaemic respiratory failure and slightly elevated C-reactive protein levels. A chest radiograph showed bilateral air-space consolidation and interstitial infiltrates and the high-resolution computed tomography scan was evocative of a perilobular pattern of organising pneumonia (OP). Due to the clinical-radiological context, she was diagnosed with a presumable nitrofurantoin-induced OP. She was started on prednisolone 60 mg daily with a progressive improvement. It is important that clinicians are aware of the spectrum of side effects associated with nitrofurantoin so as to monitor patients.
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PMID:Consider Nitrofurantoin as a Cause of Lung Injury. 3189 Jul 12