Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors report a case of toxic hepatitis in a woman of 22 years of age in the third trimester of her first pregnancy treated by methyldopa for hypertension of pregnancy which was diagnosed at 33 weeks of amenorrhoea. The prodromal symptoms were mild and consisted of nausea, vomiting and rise in temperature and this phase was associated with febrile jaundice without pruritus and it was only associated with coagulation disorders in the third stage of labour. This was a case of mixed cytolytic hepatitis (ASAT x 3N) and cholestasis (x 1.5N). The outcome was fatal. The patient died three days after delivery following haematemesis and renal failure as well as hepatic encephalopathy. The main diagnostic feature was acute hepatic stasis in spite of the absence of pruritus and the presence of a raised temperature after hematolytic, viral and obstructive causes had been eliminated. Histology confirmed that there was toxic hepatitis. This aetiology was suggested by the timing of the symptoms after MD (methyldopa) had been taken. Elkington described methyldopa hepato-toxicity in 1969. Fatal cases in the literature were in patients who were over 40 years of age. Methyldopa is used in pregnant women because of its safety as far as the fetus is concerned. Mechanism by which it causes toxic hepatitis is a combination of abnormal metabolism (the cytochrome P450 chain produces an antigen) and an immune reaction in response to this antigen and these explain why such severe and potentially fatal forms of the condition exist.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Fatal toxic hepatitis in pregnancy. A discussion of the role of methyldopa]. 232 42

Drug-induced achlorhydria in experimental animals results in excessive hypergastrinaemia, ECL-cell hyperplasia and ECL-cell carcinoidosis. However, these events have not been observed in long-term studies in patients receiving proton pump inhibitors. Serum gastrin levels increase only modestly during acute and long-term treatment. It is concluded that monitoring of serum gastrin levels and of fundic ECL cells is of no clinical relevance even during long-term therapy with proton pump inhibitors. The clinically available proton pump inhibitors such as pantoprazole, omeprazole and lansoprazole are well tolerated, with a low incidence of side-effects. Minor and serious side-effects classified as possibly related to proton pump therapy have been described in up to 2.5% of patients. This is the same order of magnitude as that found in patients treated with H2-receptor blockers and in placebo-treated controls. In most cases, therefore, the observed side-effects are unrelated to the intake of proton pump inhibitors. Minor adverse events include headache, diarrhoea, dizziness, pruritus and rash. Proton pump inhibitors are metabolized mainly in the liver via the cytochrome P450 system and interactions with drugs metabolized by the same system are possible. Evidence is becoming available which suggests that pantoprazole may have less potential to interact with the cytochrome P450 system than the other proton pump inhibitors. In the case of diazepam metabolism, pantoprazole had the least effect on prolongation of the diazepam effect. This may well be an advantage in the clinical use of the drug.
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PMID:Safety of proton pump inhibitors--an overview. 818 Feb 97

Thirty patients with dysseborrhoeic dermatitis (DD) of the scalp, 27 men and 3 women, were treated with 2% ketokonazole gel prepared in the Institute of Pharmacy of the M.M.A. Therapeutical effects was assessed on the basis of the objective clinical signs (erythema, desquamation) and subjective feeling of itching. Four weeks after the beginning of treatment the complete therapeutic response was obtained in 80% of patients (withdrawal of all clinical signs and subjective symptoms), good response was achieved in 16.6% and satisfying in 3.33% of patients. In no patients the preparation was without clinically evident effects. After cessation of the therapy, remission lasted from 2 to 12 weeks (mean, 4 weeks). The probable way of ketokonazole effect in DD is the inhibition of cytochrome P450 izoenzyme.
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PMID:[Therapy of dysseborrheic dermatitis with ketoconazole]. 849 89

Retinoids derived from retinol or beta-carotene are inactivated, among other ways, by enzymes belonging to the P450 cytochrome group. Liarozole, an imidazole-containing compound, is known to be a potent inhibitor of the cytochrome P450-mediated metabolism of all-trans retinoic acid. As a result, increased levels of this retinoid are found in skin and plasma. Therefore, in the treatment of psoriasis, therapeutic effects may be expected with liarozole which are similar to those observed with synthetic retinoids. In an open study, oral liarozole was given at a daily dose of 75 mg b.i.d., for 12 weeks to 31 patients with severe psoriasis. After 1 month, this dosage could be increased to 150 mg b.i.d. if there was no improvement or only moderate improvement. Initially, the effect of liarozole was mainly on scaling. A decrease in the Psoriasis Area and Severity Index (PASI) score of 45% at week 4, of 69% at week 8 and of 77% at week 12 was obtained, compared with baseline. A further decrease in the PASI score of up to 87% was observed in the 16 patients who were allowed to continue treatment for a maximum period of 12 months. An excellent or good improvement was noted in 77% of the patients within 12 weeks of starting treatment. This response rate had increased to 88% by the last follow-up visit. Nearly all patients (29 of 31) experienced adverse reactions, such as dry oral mucosa, headache and itching. These were mostly mild and transient, but four patients dropped out of the study because of an adverse event. Haematological, biochemical and cardiovascular parameters were not significantly influenced by liarozole. Six patients showed an increase in triglycerides, which normalized in three of four patients during further treatment. The results of this pilot study suggest that, at doses of 75-150 mg b.i.d., liarozole is an active antipsoriatic drug, and may be a useful addition to the existing therapeutic armamentarium. Controlled studies should be performed to compare liarozole with standard oral treatments.
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PMID:Inhibition of the metabolism of endogenous retinoic acid as treatment for severe psoriasis: an open study with oral liarozole. 854 99

Pantoprazole is an irreversible proton pump inhibitor which, at the therapeutic dose of 40mg, effectively reduces gastric acid secretion. In controlled clinical trials, pantoprazole (40mg once daily) has proved superior to ranitidine (300mg once daily or 150mg twice daily) and equivalent to omeprazole (20mg once daily) in the short term (< or = 8 weeks) treatment of acute peptic ulcer and reflux oesophagitis. Gastric and duodenal ulcer healing proceeded significantly faster with pantoprazole than with ranitidine, and at similar rates with pantoprazole and omeprazole. The time course of gastric ulcer pain relief was similar with pantoprazole, ranitidine and omeprazole, whereas duodenal ulcer pain was alleviated more rapidly with pantoprazole than ranitidine. Pantoprazole (40mg once daily) showed superior efficacy to famotidine (40mg once daily) in ulcer healing and pain relief after 2 weeks in patients with duodenal ulcer in a large multicentre nonblinded study. In mild to moderate acute reflux oesophagitis, significantly greater healing was obtained with pantoprazole than with ranitidine and famotidine, whereas similar healing rates were seen with pantoprazole and omeprazole. Pantoprazole showed a significant advantage over ranitidine in relieving symptoms of heartburn and acid regurgitation. Reflux symptoms were similarly alleviated by pantoprazole and omeprazole. Preliminary results indicate that triple therapy with pantoprazole, clarithromycin and either metronidazole or tinidazole is effective in the treatment of Helicobacter pylori-associated disease; however, these findings require confirmation in large well-controlled studies. Pantoprazole appears to be well tolerated during short term oral administration, with diarrhoea (1.5%), headache (1.3%), dizziness (0.7%), pruritus (0.5%) and skin rash (0.4%) representing the most frequent adverse events. The drug has lower affinity than omeprazole or lansoprazole for hepatic cytochrome P450 and shows no clinically relevant pharmacokinetic or pharmacodynamic interactions at therapeutic doses with a wide range of drug substrates for this isoenzyme system. In conclusion, pantoprazole is superior to ranitidine and as effective as omeprazole in the short term treatment of peptic ulcer and reflux oesophagitis, has shown efficacy when combined with antibacterial agents in H. pylori eradication, is apparently well tolerated and offers the potential advantage of minimal risk of drug interaction.
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PMID:Pantoprazole. A review of its pharmacological properties and therapeutic use in acid-related disorders. 888 82

Desloratadine is the orally active major metabolite of the nonsedating H1-antihistamine loratadine. The drug had no adverse cardiovascular effects in various animal models or when administered at 9 times the recommended adult dosage for 10 days in volunteers. Therapeutic dosages had no effects on wakefulness or psychomotor performance in healthy volunteers. No clinically significant interactions have been reported between desloratadine and drugs that inhibit the cytochrome P450 system, nor does the drug potentiate the adverse psychomotor effects of alcohol. Oral desloratadine 5 mg once daily for up to 4 weeks in patients with seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) significantly reduced nasal (including congestion) and non-nasal symptoms and improved health-related quality of life compared with placebo. Similar beneficial effects were observed in patients with SAR and coexisting asthma (in whom asthma symptoms and use of beta2-agonists were reduced). Desloratadine 5 mg once daily for 6 weeks significantly improved pruritus and reduced the number of hives compared with placebo in patients with chronic idiopathic urticaria (CIU). Sleep and daytime performance also improved. Desloratadine was well tolerated in clinical trials and had an adverse event profile similar to that of placebo in patients with SAR (with or without asthma) or CIU.
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PMID:Desloratadine. 1139 10

This paper provides an updated review of the use of antidepressant drugs in dermatology. Some of the psychiatric disorders that are usually comorbid with dermatological disorders and respond to antidepressants include major depressive disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, body dysmorphic disorder, social phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder usually secondary to trauma and abuse during early life. Cutaneous symptoms may be the feature of a primary psychiatric disorder, e.g. cutaneous body image problems, dermatitis artefacta, neurotic excoriations and trichotillomania, or psychiatric syndromes may be comorbid with a primary dermatological disorder such as the association of major depressive disorder or social phobia with psoriasis and obsessive compulsive disorder with acne excoriee. Some of the salient pharmacological properties of the tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) and the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) antidepressants are reviewed. The review indicates that the SSRI antidepressants are potentially beneficial in the management of all the major psychiatric syndromes that are encountered in dermatological disorders. The generally more favourable side-effect profile of the SSRIs, such as lower cardiotoxicity in contrast to the TCAs, has made them the first-line agents for the treatment of depression. Furthermore, some of the pharmacological properties of the antidepressant agents that are not related to their antidepressant activity, such as the histamine H1 blocking effect of TCAs, such as doxepin, amitriptyline and trimipramine, are of benefit in dermatological conditions such as urticaria and pruritus. This paper reviews the general guidelines for use of antidepressants and salient drug-drug interactions resulting mainly from the inhibition of the cytochrome P450 (CYP) 2D6 and 3A3/4 isoenzymes by some of the SSRI antidepressants. Before prescribing an antidepressant agent, the specific guidelines, side-effect profile, drug-drug interactions and most current indications should always be obtained.
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PMID:The use of antidepressant drugs in dermatology. 1184 9

A new competitive histamine H(1)-receptor antagonist with superior binding affinity at this receptor as compared with other common antihistamines, desloratadine is the active metabolite of loratadine, the most extensively used agent of this class. Under development for the treatment of allergic rhinitis and urticaria and currently awaiting regulatory approval in the United States, desloratadine was recently approved and became commercially available in Europe for the treatment of allergic disease. Desloratadine is at least 50-fold more potent in vitro and appears to be 10-fold more potent in vivo than loratadine. The new antihistamine is metabolized to 3-hydroxydesloratadine, which retains biological activity. Absorption of orally administered desloratadine is dose proportional, and desloratadine achieves steady-state concentrations after approximately 5 doses with once-daily administration. This is consistent with mean half-life values of 24-27 h and a 24-h dosing interval. The absorption of desloratadine is not affected by food and there are no clinically relevant drug-drug interactions. In randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trials, a single 5 mg dose of desloratadine conferred significant relief of seasonal allergic rhinitis (SAR) symptoms - including the complaint of nasal congestion - within hours of the first dose, and these effects were sustained both for the entire 24-h dosing interval and up to 2-4 weeks with once-daily treatment (5 mg/day). In addition, patients with seasonal exacerbations of mild to moderate asthma derived similar clinical benefits from desloratadine, with significant, first-dose relief of both SAR-related complaints such as nasal congestion as well as asthma symptoms. In addition, beta(2) agonist requirements for symptom management were significantly reduced from baseline in these asthma patients when treated with the 5 mg/day desloratadine regimen as compared with placebo. Also experiencing marked relief of symptoms upon treatment with desloratadine were patients with chronic idiopathic urticaria, who exhibited significant first-dose relief of pruritus and sustained reductions in this symptom, numbers of lesions (and size of largest hive) and sleep disturbances, with a marked improvement in their ability to carry out activities of daily living. The clinical benefits of desloratadine in the above clinical settings were accompanied by general improvements in quality of life. Desloratadine does not cross the blood-brain barrier, as demonstrated by both human studies using cognitive indices as well as work in animal models. Desloratadine is well tolerated, and no significant drug-related (or food-related) adverse effects were noted when the agent was administered together with cytochrome P450 inhibitors (e.g., ketoconazole, erythromycin). Administration of desloratadine has not been shown to cause any significant changes in cardiac activity at therapeutic doses, even at 9-fold higher doses, or in the presence of P450 inhibitors. Nor does administration of desloratadine lead to sedation, even in the presence of alcohol. (c) 2001 Prous Science. All rights reserved.
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PMID:Desloratadine: A preclinical and clinical overview. 1276 22

(1) Platinum-based chemotherapy is generally used to treat advanced-stage non small-cell lung cancer (stages III and IV), but has only a modest impact on survival. There is no reference treatment. (2) Gefitinib inhibits the tyrosine kinase activity of the receptor for EGF (epidermal growth factor), which is thought to be involved in tumour growth. It has a temporary licence in France and is used on a named-patient basis, but full marketing authorisation has already been granted in Japan, the United States, and elsewhere. (3) Two double-blind dose-finding studies compared two doses of oral gefitinib monotherapy (250 mg/day and 500 mg/day) in patients in whom at least two lines of chemotherapy had failed. The results were favourable, with a median survival of 6 months and a symptomatic improvement in some patients, but they are undermined by the absence of a placebo group and by major protocol violations. (4) Two double-blind trials, each in more than 1000 patients, showed that gefitinib does not increase the efficacy of first-line platinum combinations. (5) About 15% of patients receiving gefitinib monotherapy in clinical trials stopped taking the treatment because of adverse events. The most frequent were gastrointestinal (diarrhea, nausea, vomiting) and cutaneous (rash, acne, dry skin, pruritus). (6) Interstitial pneumonitis occurred in about 1% of patients, and was fatal in about one-third of cases. (7) Gefitinib is metabolised by the cytochrome P450 isoenzyme CYP3A4, so carries a potentially high risk of interactions. (8) In practice, more thorough assessment of gefitinib is needed to determine whether this new drug is beneficial for patients with non small-cell lung cancer. Marketing authorisation is not currently justified.
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PMID:Gefitinib: new preparation. Non small-cell lung cancer: stricter assessment needed. 1549 96

Olopatadine hydrochloride (CAS 140462-76-6, KW-4679, AL-4943A; hereinafter referred to as olopatadine) is a novel antiallergic drug that is a selective histamine H1 receptor antagonist possessing inhibitory effects on the release of inflammatory lipid mediators such as leukotriene and thromboxane from human polymorphonuclear leukocytes and eosinophils. Olopatadine also inhibits the tachykininergic contractions in guinea pig bronchi by prejunctional inhibition of peripheral sensory nerves. Oral administration of olopatadine at doses of 0.03 mg/kg or higher reduces the symptoms of experimental allergic cutaneous responses and rhinoconjunctivitis in sensitized animals. Preclinical and clinical evaluations have demonstrated that olopatadine is a safe drug. After oral administration to healthy volunteers, olopatadine was rapidly and extensively absorbed. Unlike most other antiallergic drugs which are eliminated via hepatic metabolism, olopatadine is mainly excreted into urine. Olopatadine did not affect cytochrome P450 activities in human liver microsomes and consequently drug-drug metabolic interactions are unlikely. In double-masked clinical trials, olopatadine was shown to be effective at alleviating symptoms of allergic diseases. The drug (Allelock) was approved in Japan for the treatment of allergic rhinitis, chronic urticaria, eczema dermatitis, prurigo, cutaneous pruritus, psoriasis vulgaris and erythema exsudativum multiforme in December, 2000. An ophthalmic solution of olopatadine is also useful for the treatment of allergic conjunctivitis: this formulation (Patanol) was approved in the USA and the European Union for the treatment of seasonal and perennial allergic conjunctivitis in 1996 and 2002, respectively.
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PMID:Properties of olopatadine hydrochloride, a new antiallergic/antihistaminic drug. 1564 65


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