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)

Primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) or chronic non-suppurative destructive cholangiohepatitis is rare in southern Africa. Eight patients with this diagnosis were identified and fully investigated at Groote Schuur Hospital between 1980 and 1988. Seven patients were female, all were white or coloured, and their ages ranged from 49 years to 80 years. All patients presented with a history of malaise, fatigue, night sweats and pruritus, which had been present for 3 months--12 years before diagnosis of PBC. Initial misdiagnosis had resulted in unnecessary invasive investigations including laparotomies. Signs of chronic liver disease, such as xantholasmas, evidence of pruritus, the sicca syndrome or hepatomegaly, were invariably present. Marked elevation of serum alkaline phosphatase level and IgM were present in all cases. Antimitochondrial antibodies were positive in significant titre in 7 of the 8 patients. Liver biopsies demonstrated stage II-III disease in all patients. Therapy was chiefly supportive and symptomatic although most patients received immunosuppressive agents. Despite the late presentation, the subsequent course was similar to that seen elsewhere where patients are recognised earlier.
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PMID:Primary biliary cirrhosis. A retrospective survey at Groote Schuur Hospital, Cape Town. 236 77

Serum concentrations of acute-phase-proteins C-reactive protein (CRP), alpha 1-antitrypsin (AAT), alpha 1-acid glycoprotein (AGP) as well as levels of immunoglobulins G, A and M and of complement components C3 and C4 were evaluated in 15 patients with advanced (stages III and IV) Hodgkin's disease. Of these patients 9 suffered from B symptoms including pruritus, night sweats and fever. While all patients had highly increased concentrations of CRP and AAT and 11 patients also had elevated levels of AGP in their sera, these concentrations were significantly (P less than 0.001) reducible by the administration of chemotherapy. Patients with B symptoms also had significantly higher concentrations of CRP (P less than 0.02), AAT (P less than 0.05) and AGP (P less than 0.05) in their sera than patients without. Plasmapheresis which was performed in 3 patients did not achieve a long-lasting reduction of serum concentrations of any acute-phase-protein tested. Complement components C3 and C4 exhibited a similar behaviour as acute-phase-proteins in that they were elevated in patients with B symptoms and reducible by the administration of chemotherapy (P less than 0.001 and P less than 0.02, respectively). We conclude that serum concentrations of CRP, AAT and AGP can serve as useful markers for the assessment of tumour activity in patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease. Whereas the concentrations of immunoglobulins G and A in patients were comparable to normal controls, IgM was significantly (P less than 0.05) reduced in patients who had received chemotherapy, but not in those who were newly diagnosed and had not received any treatment. Thus, chemotherapy lowered serum concentrations of IgM without influencing levels of IgG and IgA.
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PMID:Acute-phase-proteins and parameters of humoral immunity in patients with advanced Hodgkin's disease. 241 Apr 28

Transient acantholytic dermatosis is a papulovesicular cutaneous eruption first described in 1970. There have been subsequent reports of similar disorders occurring in patients with malignancy. Angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia is a disorder characterized by an acute onset of generalized lymphadenopathy associated with fever, malaise, pruritus, night sweats, and hepatosplenomegaly. The patient described had a papular acantholytic dermatosis associated with the development of angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia-like T-cell lymphoma. The cutaneous manifestations of angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy with dysproteinemia are discussed.
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PMID:Transient acantholytic dermatosis associated with lymphomatous angioimmunoblastic lymphadenopathy. 257 18

Symptoms due to estrogen deficiency begin in the perimenopausal years and progress as serum levels of this hormone decrease Vasomotor instability, manifested by hot flushes or night sweats, may persist for several months to a few years. Psychologic symptoms include anxiety, tension, depression, insomnia, palpitations, and headaches. Atrophy of the genital epithelium may result in senile vaginitis with symptoms of irritation, burning, pruritus, dyspareunia, and even vaginal bleeding. Even the lower urinary tract mucosa is dependent upon estrogen. Postmenopausal osteoporosis affects 25 to 50% of older women and increases the risk for vertebral, hip, and other fractures. Estrogen therapy for menopausal complaints has received adverse publicity because several reports have indicated that unopposed estrogens increase the risk of endometrial cancer. Added progestogen not only negates this risk but reduces the incidence of endometrial adenocarcinoma in estrogen-progestogen users to less than that observed in untreated women. Estrogen replacement therapy does not increase the risk of breast cancer; the incidence of this malignancy, however, was also less in the estrogen-progestogen users when compared with either the untreated women or from that expected from the national cancer surveys. In evaluating postmenopausal women for hormone replacement, the benefits of estrogen-progestogen therapy must be weighed against possible risks.
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PMID:The menopause. 351 23

Two hundred and fifty cases of histologically proven Hodgkin's disease have been reviewed. These cases were classified according to the Rye Conference histological classification (Lukes et al., 1966a) and according to the Cross classification (Cross, 1969). Overall, both classifications were reasonably effective in predicting prognosis but that of Cross with its seven sub-groups proved more difficult to use than the simpler Rye classification. In all cases the follow-up period exceeded 5 years. A study was made of the influence of clinical symptoms on survival with particular reference to night sweats, fever, pruritus, anorexia, lassitude, weight loss, haematological abnormalities and splenic enlargement. The presence of these abnormalities adversely affected prognosis. The spread of the disease from one group of nodes to the next was also documented. Considering all cases the 5-year survival was 54%. The 5-year survivals according to histological type were: lymphocytic predominance 69%, nodular sclerosis 57%, mixed cellularity 41%, lymphocytic depletion 40%. The 10-year survival was 23% which, when corrected by the actuarial method (Berkson and Gage, 1950), rose to 36%. The importance of symptomatology as well as histological grading in the prognosis of Hodgkin's disease is confirmed.
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PMID:Hodgkin's disease. A clinico-pathological study of 250 cases with a 5-year follow-up. 451 Jan 79

A preliminary open study was conducted in 20 women with menopausal sudden flushes to assess the effect of veralipride, administered as 100 mg/day for 20 days. In 15 cases, sudden flushes and night sweats were no longer present following treatment and behaviour had considerably improved. In the remaining 5 cases, sudden flushes were reduced in number and severity. A second study was then conducted in 40 women with the same symptoms, to compare the efficacy of veralipride and placebo under double-blind conditions. Successful results were obtained in 15 patients after veralipride and 5 after placebo, while treatment was a failure in 5 patients after veralipride and 15 after placebo. The difference is very significant in favor of veralipride (p < 0,01). Best results were obtained on sudden flushes, followed by mood and behavior disorders, with less consistent results in headache, pruritus vulvae, and palpitations. Clinical tolerance was good as only 4 cases of difficulty in falling asleep, 3 cases of mammary tension, and 2 cases of dryness of the mouth were reported. Biological parameters and vaginal smears were not modified by treatment.
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PMID:[Clinical study of the action of a new molecule, veralipride, on menopausal psychofunctional disorders (author's transl)]. 625 63

Two patients presented with a short history of constitutional symptoms including fatigue, weight loss, night sweats and pruritus. Both had hepatosplenomegaly and tender lymphadenopathy, and in each case lymph node biopsy revealed prominent vascularization of the interfollicular zones and the presence of an amorphous eosinophilic fibrillar material, together with many epithelioid histiocytes, immunoblasts and plasma cells. In other areas of the same lymph nodes unequivocal lymphocytic lymphoma was present. The first patient was treated with levamisole, to which there was dramatic response. She subsequently died of septicaemia, and at autopsy was shown to be free of lymphoma. The second patient responded completely to the epipodophyllotoxin VP16-213 and is back at work as a heavy labourer without any residual disease. These 2 cases illustrate that complete clinical remission can be obtained in patients with this disease even after lymphomatous transformation has occurred. Levamisole has the additional attraction of being less immunosuppressive in patients whose immune response is already impaired.
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PMID:Angio-immunoblastic lymphadenopathy. 710 Oct 70

As patients with HIV/AIDS are living longer with the illness, pain and symptom management are increasingly important health issues. This article will discuss the assessment and management of such common problems as pain, fatigue and weakness, dyspnea and cough, anorexia and weight-loss, nausea and vomiting, sleep disorders, dry mouth, diarrhea, itching, and fever and night sweats.
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PMID:Palliative care: pain and symptom management in persons with HIV/AIDS. 992 83

A 49 year-old Indian housewife was diagnosed with Hodgkin's disease in 1995. She was given combination chemotherapy comprising Chlorambucil, Vincristine, Procarbazine and Prednisolone. Unfortunately she defaulted after two courses of chemotherapy. One year later, she developed progressive right knee swelling and pain, associated with loss of appetite, loss of weight, intermittent fever, night sweats and pruritus. The right knee swelling measured 15 cm x 20 cm and was warm and tender. A plain radiograph of the right knee revealed osteolytic lesions at the distal end of the right femur and the proximal ends of the right tibia and fibula, associated with gross periosteal reaction and soft tissue swelling. Apart from left cervical lymphoadenopathy, examination of other systems was unremarkable. Pelvic bone marrow biopsy was inconclusive. An open biopsy of the lower end of the right femur was consistent with Hodgkin's disease. She was given salvage combination therapy comprising Chlorambucil, Vincristine, Procarbazine, Prednisolone, Doxorubicin, Bleomycin and Vinblastine. She tolerated the treatment well and responded with significant reduction in the swelling and pain of the right knee. Unfortunately, she again defaulted treatment after 2 courses of chemotherapy. This case illustrates an unusual presentation of Hodgkin's disease in relapse.
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PMID:Relapsed Hodgkin's disease presenting as a right knee swelling. 1455 40

Somatostatinomas are rare tumors; ampullary somatostatinomas are very rare. We report a case of a small pure somatostatin-producing neuroendocrine tumor of ampulla of Vater in a 54-year-old woman with neither neurofibromatosis nor somatostatinoma syndrome, "incidentally" discovered during an abdominal computed tomography. The patient initially refused other adjunctive exams but after 2 years she was admitted, presenting with itch, night sweats, severe fatigue, and unintentional weight loss. The size of the tumor (1.5 cm) and the other radiologic findings had not changed since the abdominal CT scan 2 years before. The somatostatin, gastrin, glucagons, serotonin, vasoactive intestinal peptide, dopamine, norepinephrine, epinephrine, and calcitonin plasma levels were normal. ERCP-obtained biopsies revealed a neuroendocrine tumor with psammoma bodies; immunohistochemical profile was positive for chromogranin and somatostatin. The patient underwent surgery; intraoperative histologic examination of lymph nodes sampling of perihepatic and periduodenal lymph nodes was negative for metastasis. We performed, therefore, a transduodenal ampullectomy. The patient continues to do well at 3 years' follow-up with no evidence of local or distance recurrence of disease.
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PMID:Incidental small ampullary somatostatinoma treated with ampullectomy 2 years after diagnosis. 1696 13


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