Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a double blind, placebo controlled, crossover study the pharmacokinetics and acute effects of enprofylline and theophylline on airway reactivity during histamine challenge were investigated in 10 healthy volunteers. The pharmacokinetic parameters of enprofylline were (mean): elimination half-life 1.9 h, total body clearance 191.1 ml X kg-1. h-1, volume of distribution 0.481 X kg-1, and protein binding 49%. Bronchial reactivity in the histamine inhalation test was expressed as the concentration causing a 20% fall in FEV1.0 (PC20). Mean PC20 values were lowest after placebo and highest after theophylline with the enprofylline values in between. Only the difference in PC20S after placebo and theophylline was statistically significant (p less than 0.05). At the time of determination of the PC20, the serum concentration of enprofylline was between 16.5 and 11.8 mumol/l, and that of theophylline was between 78.3 and 61.1 mumol/l. Adverse actions of enprofylline were nausea (3/10) and cardiovascular reactions (2/10), whereas theophylline mainly caused restlessness (3/10) and tremor (2/10). Thus enprofylline, in one-fifth of the serum concentration of theophylline cannot be regarded as equipotent in terms of bronchoprotection.
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PMID:Enprofylline: pharmacokinetics and comparison with theophylline of acute effects on bronchial reactivity in normal subjects. 370 29

A 38-year-old man was admitted to Iwakuni National Hospital on July 6, 1978, with the complaints of difficulty seeing and walking. Two weeks before admission, he first experienced dizziness and it slowly progressed to uncontrollable tremor-like movements of the whole body. On admission, he was alert, oriented and afebrile. He had not experienced nausea, vomiting nor headache. He showed irregular horizontal oscillations of the eyes. Electronystagmographic study showed that this jerky eye movement appeared especially with changes of fixation of the eyes. It was also recorded during conjugate eye movement, and while he closed his eyes. He was ataxic, unable to walk, but no other abnormalities in cerebellar functions were observed. Spinal tap was performed and yielded watery clear cerebrospinal fluid containing 9/mm3 mononuclear cells. Clonazepam was given, 1.5 mg per day, for three days followed by doses of 3 mg per day. Improvement in walking was observed one week after starting the medication, when reserpine was started at a dose of 1 mg per day and increased to a dose of 1.5 mg per day in three days. One week after starting reserpine, opsoclonus improved markedly and he became able to read again. He was discharged home on September 3, 1978. Six months after admission, reserpine was decreased to 0.5 mg per day. Difficulty in reading developed within a month. Reserpine was given 1.0 mg per day and the doses was continuously given for next three months. One year after admission, he is back to his former occupation without medication. He complains of slight difficulty in reading for more than an hour, and in watching TV.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Opsoclonus-polymyoclonia syndrome suppressed with reserpine]. 371 80

We used a new D2 dopamine agonist, mesulergine (8-alpha-amino-ergoline, CU 32-085), to treat 20 patients (12 men and 8 women), mean age 62.6 (SEM = 1.7) and mean duration of illness 5.9 (SEM = 1.0) years. Wearing-off effect was the principal indication for new therapy in 15 patients, and the others had inadequate response to levodopa. All continued on levodopa therapy, and 10 patients were studied in a double-blind controlled test. The mean motor disability decreased from 2.8 (SEM = 0.12) to 1.6 (SEM = 0.18) with mesulergine (p less than 0.0001) and increased to 1.9 (SEM = 0.20) with placebo (p less than 0.001). Tremor improved most, followed by rigidity, bradykinesia, gait, and postural instability. Side effects included dyskinesia, light-headedness, hallucinations, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, and ankle edema, but, in general, mesulergine was tolerated well.
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PMID:Placebo-controlled study of mesulergine in Parkinson's disease. 388 92

A sequential sample of 101 patients hospitalized for ethanol withdrawal and requiring sedation for evolving withdrawal syndromes was assigned randomly according to a double-blind protocol to treatment with either alprazolam or chlordiazepoxide administered orally. The data from one patient were unevaluable due to acute bleeding, leaving a sample of 100 (50 in each condition). At discharge, three independent ratings of diaphoresis, tremor, hallucinations, nausea/vomiting, and overall severity of withdrawal were obtained, and the occurrence of delirium tremens and grand mal seizures was noted. Patients also completed the Beck Depression Inventory, and their disposition following discharge was recorded. There were no statistically significant differences between the two treatment groups on any of the dependent variables studied. It was concluded that the choice between alprazolam and chlordiazepoxide for managing ethanol withdrawal should be based on criteria other than efficacy of control. Potential antidepressant effects and drug kinetics were suggested as the basis for rational decision-making.
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PMID:Double-blind trial of alprazolam and chlordiazepoxide in the management of the acute ethanol withdrawal syndrome. 388 64

We investigated the intensity and duration of the effect of a single dose of slow-release theophylline on bronchial hyperresponsiveness to ultrasonically nebulized distilled water in asthma. In six subjects with a history of mild asthma, we measured airway responsiveness to ultrasonically nebulized distilled water and serum theophylline at 4, 8, and 12 hours after treatment with placebo or slow-release theophylline (10 +/- 1 mg/kg, orally). To assess bronchial responsiveness, dose-response curves were established by plotting the baseline value of FEV1 and the largest FEV1 after each doubling dose of nebulized distilled water against the dose of nebulized water. The degree of bronchoconstriction induced by ultrasonically nebulized distilled water was significantly inhibited at 4, 8, and 12 hours after treatment with theophylline, at serum levels of 14.8 +/- 4.6, 14.4 +/- 2.8, and 12.0 +/- 2.5 micrograms/mL theophylline (mean +/- SD). Tremor occurred in three patients and was associated with nausea, epigastric pain, and tachycardia in one of them. We conclude that a single dose of slow-release theophylline has a prolonged protective effect on bronchoconstriction induced by ultrasonically nebulized distilled water, but in some subjects is associated with side effects that limit its clinical usefulness.
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PMID:Long-lasting protective effect of slow-release theophylline on asthma induced by ultrasonically nebulized distilled water. 394 51

Twenty Parkinson's disease patients, who had not yet received levodopa, were treated with low-dose bromocriptine. At a mean daily bromocriptine dose of 13.2 mg, 13 patients (65%) improved and had a 32% reduction in the combined score for tremor rigidity and bradykinesia. Adverse effects were frequent, and 25% of the patients were taken off the drug because of nausea or vomiting. After 30 months follow-up, only three patients continued on bromocriptine alone. Ten patients were eventually maintained on low-dose bromocriptine and levodopa-carbidopa, and a clear synergistic effect of bromocriptine in this drug combination was documented in eight patients. Low-dose bromocriptine does not replace levodopa as initial therapy for Parkinson's disease. The potential long-term benefit of the early use of combined low-dose levodopa-dopamine agonist therapy needs to be further studied.
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PMID:Bromocriptine: problems with low-dose de novo therapy in Parkinson's disease. 397 51

Effects of intravenous administration of the serotonin precursor tryptophan (TRP) on serum prolactin, neuromotor function, subjective mood, and blood pressure and pulse were determined in nine depressed patients before and during placebo-controlled treatment with the monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI) tranylcypromine. Tranylcypromine significantly increased the prolactin response to TRP. Four patients developed a distinctive neuromotor syndrome following TRP during tranylcypromine, but not placebo, treatment. Symptoms included hyperreflexia, ankle clonus, nystagmus, incoordination, tremor, myoclonic jerks, and nausea. There were no differences in peak prolactin, mood, or autonomic responses between patients with and without the syndrome, but those with the syndrome had received active tranylcypromine for a significantly shorter duration. Tranylcypromine had little effect on TRP-induced changes in mood or autonomic function, except for a modest enhancement of the TRP-induced rise in diastolic blood pressure. These results suggest that tranylcypromine treatment may enhance serotonin function in depression.
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PMID:Effects of tranylcypromine treatment on neuroendocrine, behavioral, and autonomic responses to tryptophan in depressed patients. 403 56

A double-blind cross-over trial over 24 weeks (10 weeks on the active remedy, 4 weeks off treatment, and 10 weeks on placebo) of the effect of L-dopa on idiopathic Parkinsonism (paralysis agitans) has shown no difference in the response obtained in patients who had undergone previous stereotaxic ventrolateral thalamotomy and in those who had not. Of the 34 patients (18 men and 16 women) in the trial 18 had been operated on (nine unilateral, nine bilateral operations) and 16 had not. All patients entering the trial were taking anticholinergic drugs in stable dosage and these were continued throughout. The only factor which seemed to limit the response to treatment was pre-existing hypertension. Of 31 patients who completed the 10-week treatment period, 12 showed marked improvement, 15 moderate improvement, and 4 and mild or negligible change. It seems that previous ventrolateral thalamotomy affords some protection against the development of L-dopa-induced involuntary limb movements on the side contralateral to the operation. As found by others, maximum benefit was seen in bradykinesia and rigidity and related features but a significant reduction in tremor was also noted during treatment. Side effects (nausea, hypotension, and involuntary movements) were common but rarely limited the therapeutic response.
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PMID:L-dopa in Parkinsonism and the influence of previous thalamotomy. 492 53

One hundred patients with Parkinson's disease were treated with levodopa for more than a year at UCLA Medical Center. They were examined at given intervals and their improvement was graded. The optimum therapeutic dose was attained by balancing side effects against relief of symptoms and ranged from 1.5 grams to 8.0 grams per day (average 4.3 grams). There is no doubt that levodopa is the most effective treatment now available for Parkinson's disease. At the end of the first year, 60 percent of the patients improved 50 percent or better, and 10 percent were considered symptom-free. All major symptoms of this disease, including rigidity, akinesia and tremor, improved in variable degree. There were no serious abnormalities in the routine clinical laboratory tests. The comon side effects included nausea, vomiting and choreoathetoid dyskinesias. The side effects were not life threatening, but occasionally were major therapeutic challenges. Maximal benefits with minimal side effects were achieved only by careful adjustments of the levodopa dosage as the months went by. This needed careful management by the physician and cooperation by the patient. Anticholinergic medications or amantadine hydrochloride, sometimes both, usually supplemented the effect of the levodopa.
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PMID:One to two year treatment of Parkinson's disease with levodopa. 508 81

In 70-80% of asthmatic patients, an attack of asthma will follow 6-10 min of strenuous exercise. The increase in airway resistance is accompanied by hyperinflation and arterial hypoxemia and makes it difficult to continue or resume exercise. The past 10 yr have seen major advances in the prevention and treatment of exercise-induced asthma (EIA). The beta-sympathomimetic drugs, when administered as aerosols, have been shown to be most effective in reversing the airway obstruction, hyperinflation, and exercise-induced hypoxemia in patients with asthma. When administered as aerosols prior to exercise, the increase in airways resistance, hyperinflation, and hypoxemia are blocked in about 90% of patients. In addition to the sympathomimetic agents, sodium cromoglycate will also ameliorate or prevent EIA in 60-70% of patients. Oral administration of beta-sympathomimetics or methylxanthines is less efficacious in the prevention or treatment of EIA. Delay in absorption from the gastrointestinal tract requires at least 1-2 h before a significant response is observed. Prevention of EIA requires an adequate blood level, possibly because a high concentration of the drug does not reach the airway when the drug is given by the oral route. More importantly, aerosol administration prevents EIA at a fraction of the dose required orally. The side effects, such as nausea, tachycardia, and skeletal muscle tremor commonly observed following oral bronchodilator administration are rare with aerosol therapy.
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PMID:Drugs affecting the respiratory system with particular reference to asthma. 611 44


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