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)

40 patients suffering from chronic urticaria were randomly treated with either Terfenadine or Astemizole. The treatment period was 8 days after a 4 day wash out phase with placebo. The intensity of the symptoms was quantified and daily recorded by the patients. Both antihistamines influenced significantly the intensity of the pruritus and the flares. With the used study design and dosage slight superiority of Astemizole over Terfenadine could be observed. Neither Astemizole nor Terfenadine showed sedation side effects. The average amount of the sedation symptom scores was during the therapy phase on the same level as during the placebo phase.
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PMID:[Comparison of astemizole and terfenadine in the treatment of chronic urticaria. A randomized double-blind study of 40 patients]. 285 14

Two new non-sedating antihistamines, astemizole (10 mg per day) and terfenadine (120 mg per day), were compared in a double-blind randomized study in 42 adult patients suffering from chronic urticaria. The trial lasted 4 weeks. Patients were evaluated at 2 and 4 weeks and kept a daily diary of their symptoms. There was a statistically significant decrease in pruritus, erythema and urticaria papules in both groups throughout the study. Changes in papule size, number and frequency were greater in the astemizole group though not significantly different to the terfenadine group. The effect of astemizole increased with time whereas that of terfenadine decreased after about 3 weeks of treatment. Astemizole was globally considered to be the most effective drug by both investigator and patients, with excellent/good results in 77% of the patients compared with 55% to 60% in the terfenadine group. Both drugs were reported to be more effective and faster acting than other antihistamines taken previously. Side-effects were infrequent and minor in both groups.
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PMID:Double-blind comparison of astemizole and terfenadine in the treatment of chronic urticaria. 288 54

Astemizole is a new H1 histamine-receptor antagonist that has a long elimination half-life and high H1-receptor affinity. This double-blind study evaluated the safety and efficacy of astemizole in the treatment of chronic idiopathic urticaria (more than or equal to 3 months). Seventeen male and 34 female adult patients with chronic idiopathic urticaria entered the 2-month study. After a 48- to 72-hour washout, half the subjects were prerandomized to receive astemizole (10 mg), and the other half received placebo. Placebo-treated patients who were unable to complete the full 8 weeks because of uncontrolled chronic urticaria symptoms were entered into a 2-month open astemizole trial. Treatment with astemizole, as measured at the end point of each patient's treatment and compared to placebo, resulted in significant improvement of pruritus, erythema, number of wheals, frequency of urticarial attacks, and control of urticaria (p less than or equal to 0.03). The overall response to astemizole was significantly better than for placebo, according to both the investigator's and the patient's global evaluations (p less than 0.01) and as indicated by dropouts caused by treatment failure with placebo (p = 0.005). Six of 26 (24%) of the placebo-treated patients in the double-blind study had good to excellent results on the basis of global assessments. Thirteen of 16 patients with placebo-treatment failures who received astemizole in the open trial improved significantly from baseline symptoms of pruritus, erythema, and number of wheals (p less than or equal to 0.05). No significant side effects were reported except mild sedation in three astemizole-treated subjects.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The treatment of mild to severe chronic idiopathic urticaria with astemizole: double-blind and open trials. 309 9

Astemizole and terfenadine, two potent non-sedative H1 antihistamines, had no effect on itch measured objectively as nocturnal scratching and subjectively on a 10 cm line. Trimeprazine, however, a more sedative but less potent H1 antihistamine, was antipruritic, as was nitrazepam, a sedative benzodiazepine. We concluded (a) that antipruritic drugs act centrally by a property related to sedation; (b) H1 receptor antagonists have a peripheral antipruritic action only when itch is due to histamine release, as in the wealing disorders. Thus the new nonsedative H1 antihistamines have no place in the treatment of itch from other causes.
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PMID:Mechanism of action of antipruritic drugs. 613 20