Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Subacute lead encephalopathy due a chronic poisoning was present in a 6 year-old child. Neurologic features (coma, seizures, CSF abnormalities) began after 2 weeks of vomiting, abdominal pain and constipation. Diagnosis was confirmed by studies of porphyrin metabolism. Lead poisoning following pica in childhood has rarely been reported in France. Its pathogenesis, main features, diagnosis and treatment are reviewed.
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PMID:[Lead poisoning revealed by severe encephalopathy : pica does exist in France (author's transl)]. 731 73

Hereditary coproporphyria (Hepatic coproporphyria: HCP); HCP is the rarest and least recognized among hepatic porphyrias and is characterised by an excess of faecal and urinary excretion of coproporphyrin (mainly isomer III). The deficiency is in coproporphyrinogen oxidase. HCP was first described by Berger and Goldberg in 1955 and was considered an asymptomatic biochemical abnormality. It later became evident that HCP could provoke acute attacks similar to those of acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) and variegate porphyria (VP). Such episodes are often provoked by barbiturates, sulphonamides and other drugs, and include automatic symptoms (hypertension, tachycardia, abdominal pain, constipation), central (epileptic seizures, mental disturbances) and peripheral nervous system dysfunction. During acute attacks, urinary ALA (delta-aminole-vulinic acid) and PBG (porphobilinogen) are elevated just as in AIP and VP, however, a marked elevation of faecal COPRO (coproporphyrin) is diagnostic of HCP. Laparoscopic finding of our case showed a map-like appearance of the liver surface with slightly depressed dark-bluish areas and reddish-brown areas. The liver biopsy specimen showed red fluorescence under ultraviolet light. On HE staining, hydropic degeneration of the hepatocytes and many brown granules in the hepatocytes were seen. A part of the granules stained positive for iron. Schmorl's stain showed many needle-shaped crystallines. Erythropoietic coproporphyria (ECP); Heilmeyer and Clotten have described that elevated PROTO (protoporphyrin) and COPRO were found in the RBC of the patient. Topi et al. described two brothers with cutaneous photosensitivity similar to that of erythropoietic protoporphyria, but with elevated RBC PROTO and COPRO III in both. Very little is known about this disease.
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PMID:[Hereditary coproporphyria (Hepatic coproporphyria), Erythropoietic coproporphyria]. 761 59

A phase I-II clinical trial was conducted to determine the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) of oral cyclosporine (CsA) and vinblastine in patients with metastatic renal cell cancer (RCC) as well as to estimate the response rate. Sixteen patients received a 5 mg/kg oral loading dose of CsA followed by 3 days of CsA in 4 divided daily doses escalating from 10 mg/kg per day up to 17 mg/kg per day. Vinblastine (Vbl) was administered as an intravenous bolus on the morning of the 3rd day with dose escalation from 6 to 10 mg/m2. Cycles were repeated every 4 weeks until tumor progression. Forty-nine cycles of CsA with vinblastine were administered. The maximum tolerated dose of Vbl was 10 mg/m2, with neutropenia as the dose-limiting toxicity resulting in one death. CsA could not be escalated above 17 mg/kg per day because of nausea and vomiting. Other toxicities included constipation (100%), malaise (100%), temporary increase in pain (36%), and one seizure that may have been drug-related. There were no clinically significant changes in renal function or serum bilirubin. Mean peak whole-blood CsA level at the highest CsA dose level was 919 ng/ml (range: 414-1,827) with a trough prior to Vbl injection of 451 ng/ml (range: 128-1,229). There were no tumor responses. The combination of oral CsA and Vbl is not nephrotoxic but is poorly tolerated. In most patients optimal blood levels of CsA for reversal of MDR cannot be reliably achieved, and vinblastine dose intensity must be compromised because of the significant toxicity of this regimen.
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PMID:Phase I-II study of vinblastine and oral cyclosporin A in metastatic renal cell carcinoma. 774 14

The antidepressant venlafaxine has a unique chemical structure and neuropharmacologic profile. It significantly inhibits reuptake of both serotonin and norepinephrine and lacks notable muscarinic-cholinergic or alpha-adrenergic effects. Premarketing studies involving more than 2000 patients showed the efficacy of venlafaxine to be significantly greater than placebo at dosages between 75 and 375 mg/day in both outpatients and inpatients. The medication may be administered twice or three times daily. Venlafaxine was found equally effective for patients older and younger than 60 years and in those with psychomotor retardation or agitation; it proved slightly more efficacious than fluoxetine in a comparison study with melancholic inpatients. A promising finding of these studies is the suggestion of a rapid onset of clinical effect for venlafaxine. In some studies, venlafaxine showed a consistent and robust clinical superiority over placebo by Week 1, and in the inpatient study involving melancholic patients, the superiority of venlafaxine was demonstrated as early as Day 4. In general, early responses are seen at the higher dosages. Venlafaxine has also shown promise in treating rigorously defined treatment-refractory depression. The adverse effects of venlafaxine that most often led to discontinuation from a clinical study were nausea (6%), somnolence (3%), insomnia (3%), and dizziness (3%). Although nausea was the most common adverse effect overall, it resolved rapidly--within the first 1 to 3 weeks of therapy. Other adverse events with incidences significantly higher than with placebo were dizziness, constipation, sweating, nervousness, and abnormal ejaculation. The seizure rate and potential for cardiac conduction changes or orthostatic hypotension with venlafaxine were comparable with rates seen with the serotonin selective reuptake inhibitors. A small number of patients experienced dose-dependent blood pressure elevation with venlafaxine in premarketing studies (3% to 5% of those receiving < or = 200 mg/day; 7% of those receiving 201-300 mg/day; 13% of those receiving > 300 mg/day vs. 2% receiving placebo). In general, venlafaxine is well tolerated, and its treatment discontinuation rate is similar to those of the newer antidepressants and superior to discontinuation rates with the first-generation agents.
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PMID:The role of venlafaxine in rational antidepressant therapy. 796 45

The FG syndrome is an X-linked recessive mental retardation syndrome. Ten patients are reviewed with special emphasis on the natural history of the intellectual development, constipation, and the prognosis for growth and behaviour. Six out of 10 patients are still macrocephalic, and there is no evidence for a specific growth pattern with respect to height. The degree of mental retardation is is usually severe. The behaviour is characteristically friendly, sociable and over-talkative, with periodic aggression. Six patients have seizures. A characteristic progression seems to occur from congenital hypotonia with joint hyperlaxity at birth, to joint contractures with apparent spasticity and unsteady gait later in life. The constipation was a temporary problem in five cases. The cowlick and the fetal pads persist and are important, but not specific, for the diagnosis.
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PMID:A clinical follow-up of British patients with FG syndrome. 805 29

Although the standard tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs) are generally effective in the treatment of depression, they can cause several troublesome adverse effects. Chief among these are their anticholinergic actions, which range from annoying dryness of the mouth and constipation to potentially dangerous urinary retention and confusion or delirium in the ill and elderly. Cardiovascular effects of TCAs include orthostatic hypotension, tachycardia and cardiac conduction slowing. Many TCAs are sedating and promote weight gain. Also problematic is the potential lethality of TCAs in overdose. The continual introduction of a host of new antidepressants over the past 15 years has provided an opportunity to improve the benefit-risk ratio for many patients by reducing medication-related toxicity. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and amfebutamone (bupropion), among others, are examples of effective antidepressants free of tricyclic-like anticholinergic, cardiovascular, sedating and appetite/weight-increasing effects. However, the new-generation drugs also present adverse effects of their own, including gastrointestinal distress, agitation and drug-drug interactions in the case of the SSRIs, and the risk of seizures or psychosis in amfebutamone recipients. Monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors have also been refined; reversible inhibitors of MAO-type A afford protection against the usually feared hypertensive reaction to indirect sympathomimetic substances. The availability of new-generation antidepressants thus increases the likelihood of clinical response with a reduction in unwanted toxicity.
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PMID:Comparative tolerability profiles of the newer versus older antidepressants. 813 85

Clozapine (CLZ) and metabolites norclozapine and clozapine-N-oxide were assayed with a new, sensitive (2 pmol), and selective method in 68 serum samples from 44 psychotic subjects, 20 to 54 years old, ill 16 years, and treated with CLZ for 2.2 years (currently at 294 mg, 3.4 mg/kg daily). CLZ levels averaged 239 ng/ml (0.73 microM; 92 ng/ml per mg/kg dose) or 48% of total analytes (norclozapine = 41% [91% of CLZ] and clozapine-N-oxide = 11%); metabolite and CLZ levels were highly correlated (rs = 0.9), and CLZ levels varied with daily dose (rs = 0.7). Sampling twice yielded similar within-subject analyte levels (r = 0.8 to 0.9; difference = 24% to 33%). Range and variance narrowed when levels were expressed per weight-corrected dose (ng/ml per mg/kg). Levels per dose were 40% higher in nonsmoking women than men, despite a 60% lower milligram per kilogram dose in women, and did not vary by diagnosis or age in this limited sample. Fluoxetine increased serum CLZ analytes by 60%; valproate had less effect. Patients rated treatment very positively; observer-assessed benefits typically were more moderate. Common late side effects were sialorrhea (80%), excess sedation (58%), obesity (55% > 200 lb), mild tachycardia (51%), constipation (32%), and enuresis (27%); there were no seizures or leukopenia. There was little evident relationship of drug dose or serum level to current clinical measures or side effect risks.
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PMID:Clozapine and metabolites: concentrations in serum and clinical findings during treatment of chronically psychotic patients. 819 52

Ninety children were treated for acute lymphoblastic leukemia or non-Hodgkin lymphoma during 1986 through 1992 in the Children's Hospital, University of Helsinki, in Finland. During induction chemotherapy, nine of the children had visual hallucinations progressing to confusion and seizure. The symptoms were often preceded by severe constipation and significantly elevated blood pressure. Neuroradiologic examinations showed bilateral cortical or subcortical white matter lesions. Despite the stroke like manifestations, the lesions were reversible. The triangular shape and location of the lesions in the watershed areas between the major cerebral arteries suggest vascular ischemia as the cause.
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PMID:Transient ischemic cerebral lesions during induction chemotherapy for acute lymphoblastic leukemia. 822 79

The purpose of this study was to compare the safety profile of cefepime, a new extended-spectrum, fourth-generation cephalosporin used to treat mild-to-severe bacterial infections, with that of ceftazidime. A total of 2,032 patients enrolled in North American and European cefepime trials were analyzed. The study population spanned adolescence to the elderly (15-100 years); the median age was 62 years. Cefepime was compared with ceftazidime (1,456 patients), a third-generation cephalosporin. Cefepime dosing was 1-4 g/day (0.5-2.0 g twice daily) for adults; ceftazidime dosing was 1-6 g/day (0.5 g every 12 hours to 2.0 g every 8 hours). A limited number of cefepime-treated patients received 2 g every 8 hours. The median length of dosing for both cefepime and ceftazidime was 7 days. In randomized trials in which cefepime (2,032 patients) was compared with ceftazidime (1,456 patients), analysis of comparative data indicated that adverse events of probable or unknown relation to study drugs were observed in 13.8% of cefepime patients and 15.6% of ceftazidime patients. The most commonly observed adverse event for cefepime was headache (2.4%), followed by nausea (1.8%), rash (1.8%), and diarrhea (1.7%). For ceftazidime, the most commonly observed adverse event was diarrhea (3.2%), followed by headache (2.5%), nausea (2.1%), rash (1.9%), and constipation (1.5%). The incidence of positive Coombs' test was higher in high-dose cefepime recipients than in ceftazidime recipients (14.5% vs 8.7%; p = 0.043), although there was no evidence of hemolysis in either treatment group. Coadministration of analgesics, diuretics, and anticoagulants did not increase incidence of adverse events associated with study-drug therapy. Adverse renal and hematologic events, as well as anaphylaxis and death, were rare in both groups. In the comparative trials with cefepime, anaphylaxis was reported in no patients receiving cefepime and in one patient receiving ceftazidime. None of the three seizures reported in patients receiving cefepime and one of six seizures in patients receiving ceftazidime were of probable or possible relationship to the study drugs. None of the 12 cases of gastrointestinal hemorrhage reported in cefepime patients or five cases reported in ceftazidime patients were judged to be related to treatment drug. Tolerance for intravenous administration in both treatment groups was similar. Cefepime did not effect any significant or unusual allergic, hematologic, gastrointestinal, neurologic, or renal toxicity when administered to patients with mild-to-severe infections, including those receiving concomitant medications. The safety profile of cefepime is excellent and comparable to that of ceftazidime and those reported for other cephalosporins.
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PMID:Safety of cefepime: a new extended-spectrum parenteral cephalosporin. 867

Nefazodone hydrochloride is a phenylpiperazine antidepressant with a mechanism of action that is distinct from those of other currently available drugs. It potently and selectively blocks postsynaptic serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) 5-HT2A receptors and moderately inhibits serotonin and noradrenaline (norepinephrine) reuptake. In short term clinical trials of 6 or 8 weeks' duration, nefazodone produced clinical improvements that were significantly greater than those with placebo and similar to those achieved with imipramine, and the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) fluoxetine, paroxetine and sertraline. The optimum therapeutic dosage of nefazodone appears to be between 300 and 600 mg/day. Limited long term data suggest that nefazodone is effective in preventing relapse of depression in patients treated for up to 1 year. Analyses of pooled clinical trial results indicate that nefazodone and imipramine produces similar and significant improvements on anxiety- and agitation-related rating scales compared with placebo in patients with major depression. Short term tolerability data indicate that nefazodone has a lower incidence of adverse anticholinergic, antihistaminergic and adrenergic effects than imipramine. Compared with SSRIs, nefazodone causes fewer activating symptoms, adverse gastrointestinal effects (nausea, diarrhoea, anorexia) and adverse effects on sexual function, but is associated with more dizziness, dry mouth, constipation, visual disturbances and confusion. Available data also suggest that nefazodone is not associated with abnormal weight gain, seizures, priapism or significant sleep disruption, and appears to be relatively safe in overdosage. Nefazodone inhibits the cytochrome P450 3A4 isoenzyme and thus has the potential to interact with a number of drugs. Further long term and comparative studies will provide a more accurate assessment of the relative place of nefazodone in the management of major depression. Nonetheless, available data suggest that nefazodone is a worthwhile treatment alternative to tricyclic antidepressants and SSRIs in patients with major depression.
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PMID:Nefazodone. A review of its pharmacology and clinical efficacy in the management of major depression. 921 Oct 88


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