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)

Ten patients with systemic mycoses, including five with fungal meningitis, were treated with intravenously or intrathecally administered miconazole, or both. Minimal inhibitory concentrations of miconazole for clinical isolates of Coccidioides immitis, Cryptococcus neoformans and Candida albicans were less than 0.6 microg per ml. Except for pruritus of variable degrees, the drug was well tolerated both intravenously and intrathecally by all patients. No measurable impairment of renal, hepatic or bone marrow function was observed in patients after 4(1/2) months of intravenous therapy. No hematological or biochemical abnormalities and no evidence of recurrent coccidioidal osteomyelitis were observed in 16 months of follow-up in our first patient treated with this drug. Miconazole is apparently an effective antifungal drug of low toxicity and is a potentially useful agent for treatment of human systemic mycoses.
West J Med 1977 Jan
PMID:Intravenous and intrathecal miconazole therapy for systemic mycoses. 57 77

A 25-year-old white female returned from West Africa with a two-year history of epidosic swelling, pruritus, and pain in a wrist, associated with peripheral eosinophilia. Serologic and immediate skin tests with Dirofilaria immitis antigen were positive, and blood smears transiently showed microfilariae of Acanthocheilonema perstans after the patient had been treated with diethylcarbamazine. Before treatment, both the serum concentration of IgE and the eosinophil content of arylsulfatase, an enzyme that selectively inactivates slow-reacting substance of anaphylaxis, were elevated; the patient's peripheral leukocytes released histamine and eosinophil chemotactic factor of anaphylaxis when challenged with D. immitis antigen. After one course of diethylcarbamazine, the clinical manifestations and abnormal in vitro immunologic results resolved. Host response to A. perstans infection appears to involve both IgE-mediated hypersensitivity and alterations in an eosinophil enzyme.
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PMID:Studies of immediate hypersensitivity in a patient with Acanthocheilonema perstans filarial infection. 107 19

Seventy-four patients with clinical and laboratory diagnosis of candida vaginitis at Special Treatment Clinic, U.C.H., Ibadan were treated with daily dose of 400mg Ketoconazole (Nizoral) for 5 days. Forty had primary infection and 34 (46.0%) had recurrent infection. Vaginal skin infection, discharge, vulva pruritus and dyspareunia were the key symptoms and signs. Follow-up showed disappearance of findings a week following treatment except vaginal infection which was still present in 2 (2.9%) patients. Four weeks after treatment, 4--7% of the cases had one symptom or the other but more experienced dyspareunia. Mycological tests showed positive results in wet smear examination in 6.7%. Nevertheless, 80% of the 34 with recurrent infection preferred oral treatment to topical vaginal applications which they had had in the past. The implication of this result in treatment of acute and chronic vaginal candidosis in our community is discussed.
West Afr J Med
PMID:Oral treatment of candida vaginitis: experience at the Special Treatment Clinic University College Hospital, Ibadan, Nigeria. 130 94

One hundred and thirteen children with symptomatic uncomplicated falciparum malaria were treated with either chloroquine 25 mg/kg body weight over 3 d (51 subjects) or mefloquine 25 mg/kg body weight single dose (62 subjects). The cure rate in the chloroquine group was 65% and in the mefloquine group 100%. 14 patients with chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria (7 RI, 6 RII and one RIII) were successfully treated with mefloquine. The clearance times of parasitaemia and fever were 60 +/- 21.5 h and 24.7 +/- 10.1 h respectively in the chloroquine-sensitive group and 52.3 +/- 18.2 h and 24.5 +/- 23.7 h respectively in the mefloquine group. In the chloroquine-resistant group treated successfully with mefloquine, these clearance times were 44.0 +/- 8.9 and 24.0 h respectively. The only remarkable adverse reaction in the chloroquine group was pruritus which occurred in 7 subjects. Abdominal pain and diarrhoea (8 subjects) and dizziness (3 subjects) were the only important adverse reactions in the mefloquine group. It is concluded that, despite previous reports of primary reduced susceptibility to mefloquine in vitro of some West African isolates of Plasmodium falciparum, this drug may be useful in the treatment of both chloroquine-sensitive and chloroquine-resistant falciparum malaria in West Africa.
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PMID:Clinical efficacy of mefloquine in children suffering from chloroquine-resistant Plasmodium falciparum malaria in Nigeria. 209 99

A 19-year-old male university student of West Indian origin presented with fever, rigor, watery diarrhoea and noted intermittent generalised giant urticarial wheals of 2 weeks' duration. He swam in Lake Victoria, Uganda, 6 weeks previously and developed a swimmers' itch. Ova of Schistosoma mansoni was demonstrated by the formol-ether concentration method of the faeces. An initial single dose (40 mg/kg) of praziquantel with prednisolone 40 mg once daily for 5 days was given with no clinical deterioration of his condition. It is therefore safe and beneficial to give corticosteroid with chemotherapy in acute schistosomiasis (Katayama fever).
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PMID:Acute schistosomiasis (Katayama fever): corticosteroid as adjunct therapy. 251 23

The HIV epidemic probably arose in Africa at about the same time as in the West, and there is a significant seroprevalence of HIV in the central African region. However, the epidemiology and clinical course of AIDS are different in Africa and in the West. In Africa males are infected as often as females, and the commonest means of transmission is heterosexual intercourse. Many HIV-infected people are symptomless, but many others present with or progress to generalized lymphadenopathy, pruritus, herpes zoster, herpes simplex, cellulitis, and oral candidiasis. The World Health Organization developed a clinical case-definition of AIDS in Africa, which was found to have a specificity of 90% and a sensitivity of 59% when tested in Zaire. The Kaposi's sarcoma seen in African AIDS patients is more aggressive than that seen in the West and is often visceral. Gastrointestinal AIDS (the "slim" disease) with weight loss and diarrhea is common in Africa, as are oral and esophageal candidiasis. In Africa Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia is rare, but pulmonary tuberculosis is common. Neurological manifestations include cerebral toxoplasmosis, cytomegalovirus infection, headache, and terminal encephalopathy. About 60% of infants born to seropositive women are infected and die within the 1st year of life. Lack of drugs and diagnostic facilities make both diagnosis and treatment of opportunistic infections difficult.
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PMID:Clinical aspects of HIV infection in developing countries. 305 40

The first two cases of onchocerciasis seen in Canada are reported. The patients had come from West Africa to study in Canada several months prior to admission to hospital. The presenting symptom in each case was intense pruritus. One of the patients had early ocular involvement. The diagnosis was made by means of microscopic examination of a skin snip. The subcutaneous nodule excised from one of the patients showed the adult Onchocerca volvulus. Both patients also had urinary schistosomiasis. The clinical features, laboratory findings, treatment and public health aspects of onchocerciasis are discussed.
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PMID:Onchocerciasis in Canada. 481 12

Twenty immigrants from Mali and West Senegal were treated in Paris. Onchocerciasis was diagnosed by six skin snips using a Holth punch. Ivermectine was given in a single oral dose: ten patients were given 50 mcg/kg, three were given 75 mcg/kg and seven received 100 mcg/kg. No patients had ocular symptoms. The results were as follows: Pruritus disappeared rapidly in 9 out of 11 patients who itched before treatment. The microfilarial load decreased rapidly, especially in cases treated with 75 mcg/kg and 100 mcg/kg as all patients tested on day 60 were negative. Clinical signs of the Mazzotti reaction and ocular reactions were not observed following the treatment. Pruritus was briefly aggravated in only two patients. No cardiovascular, hematological, hepatic or renal toxicity was noted.
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PMID:[Treatment of human onchocerciasis with ivermectin]. 668 18

Two groups of morbidly obese patients undergoing a gastric stapling procedure were compared. Patients in group I received 5 mg of morphine through a lumbar epidural catheter immediately after the surgical procedure while group II patients were treated conventionally with parenterally administered morphine. In group I less narcotics were needed and patients were able to walk earlier than in group II. Length of hospital stay, time to removal of the nasogastric tube and postoperative pulmonary function were not significantly different between groups. Two patients in group I and one patient in group II had generalized pruritus, and in one study patient bradypnea developed in association with the epidural administration of morphine. It is concluded that morbidly obese patients can benefit from epidurally administered morphine and that this form of therapy has a role in the management of these patients.
West J Med 1984 May
PMID:Epidural administration of morphine postoperatively for morbidly obese patients. 673 Apr 91

"Topics in the Primary Care Medicine" Presents articles on common diagnostic or therapeutic problems (such as dizziness, pruritus, insomnia, shoulder pain and urinary tract infections) encountered in primary care practice that generally do not fall into well-defined sub-specialty areas and are rarely discussed thoroughly in medical school, house staff training, textbooks and journals. Often the pathophysiology is poorly understood and clinical trials to assess the effectiveness of diagnostic tests or therapies may be lacking. Nevertheless, these problems confront practitioners with practical management questions. The articles in this series discuss new tests and therapies and suggest reasonable approaches even when definitive studies are not available. Each article has several general references for suggested further reading. We hope this series is of interest and we welcome comments, criticisms and suggestions.
West J Med 1983 Feb
PMID:Falls in the elderly: a clinical approach. 683 37


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