Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0034063 (pulmonary edema)
10,665 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An incident is reported in which 2 intravenous drug abusers died as the result of uncontrolled experimentation with intravenous injection of the common anti-hypertensive and anti-anginal drug Nifedipine (Adalat t.m. Bayer), probably in mistake for the commonly abused short-acting benzodiazepine drug Temazepam. Large quantities of Nifedipine were identified in the blood of both decreased men by gas chromatography. Apart from intense gastric mucosal congestion, pulmonary oedema and general visceral congestion, the autopsy findings were entirely nonspecific. The similarity in colour, shape and texture between capsules of Nifedipine and those of Temazepam is likely to have prompted the mistake.
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PMID:Two deaths from intravenous nifedipine abuse. 178 48

Nifedipine (Adalat) is marketed as an anti-hypertensive agent. Nifedipine inhibits voltage-dependent L-type calcium channels, which leads to vascular (and other) smooth muscle relaxation and negative inotropic and chronotropic effects on the heart. Vasodilation, followed by a baroreceptor-mediated increase in sympathetic tone then results in indirect cardiostimulation. Nifedipine was introduced as a tocolytic agent at a time when beta-agonists and magnesium sulphate dominated the arena for the prevention of preterm birth. The oral administration route, the availability of immediate and slow-release preparations, the low incidence of (mild) side effects, and its limited costs explain the attraction to this medication from the obstetric field and its rapid and widespread distribution. Currently, over 40 studies have been published on nifedipine's tocolytic effectiveness, including seven meta-analyses. The quality of the studies suffers particularly from performance bias because the majority of them failed to ensure adequate blinding to treatment both for providers and patients. Concerns about other methodological flaws include measurements, outcome assessment and attrition bias. In particular, the safety aspects of nifedipine for tocolysis have been under-assessed. Conclusions from the meta-analyses, favouring the use of nifedipine as a tocolytic agent, are not supported by close examination of the data. The tocolytic effectiveness and "safety" of nifedipine has been studied primarily in normal pregnancies. Based on its pharmacological properties, one should be cautious to administer nifedipine when the maternal cardiovascular condition is compromised, such as with intrauterine infection, twin pregnancy, maternal hypertension, cardiac disease, etc. Life-threatening pulmonary oedema and/or cardiac failure are definite risks and have been reported. Under such circumstances, the baroreceptor-mediated increase in sympathetic tone may not balance the cardiac-depressant activity of nifedipine.
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PMID:Nifedipine trials: effectiveness and safety aspects. 1571 1