Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042109 (urticaria)
6,569 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Anti-hypertensive drugs, including diuretics and beta-blocking drugs, belong to a group of therapeutics used by about a fourth of the Danish population. As with cytostatics, antibiotics, and topical remedies, they rather frequently cause adverse drug reactions (ADR) in the skin. No exact statistical information is available concerning the extent of such side effects. The information obtained by Danish National Board of Health's Committee on Adverse Drug Reactions shows that 10-60% of ADR from diuretics, beta-blocking agents, and anti-hypertensive drugs are dermatological. The skin symptoms are not unique for any specific drug. But certain symptoms occur more frequently than others. Thiazides can give vasculitis, a phototoxic/-allergic eruption, erythema multiforme, or eczema. The combination of amiloride (5 mg) and hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg) carries the highest number of recorded ADR; 59% of these are in the skin. Half of the skin ADR are phototoxic eczema. Furosemide may give eczema, purpura, a bullous eruption, or Steven-Johnson's syndrome in rare cases. Methyldopa can induce eczematous eruptions on hands and feet, a lichenoid eruption, a lupus erythematosus-like eruption, or purpura. Hydralazine may give lupus erythematosus-like eruptions, eczema, or urticaria. Non-specific beta-blocking drugs can induce a morbilliform rash and may aggravate psoriasis. Captopril may induce pruritus in up to 15% of the patients and skin eruptions in 2%. The most serious dermatological side effect, exfoliative dermatitis, is very rarely seen following the use of anti-hypertensive drugs or diuretics.
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PMID:Adverse reactions in the skin from anti-hypertensive drugs. 289 92

Eleven patients with severe, treatment-resistant essential or renovascular hypertension were treated with captopril after withdrawal of various multiple drug regimes. If supine diastolic blood pressure remained greater than 90 mm Hg on a maximum daily dose of 450 mg captopril, a diuretic and then a beta-adrenoceptor blocker were added. Patient-volunteered complaints were carefully noted. Mean (+/- SE) systolic and diastolic blood pressures fell from 225 +/- 6.8/131 +/- 4.4 mm Hg on various multiple drug regimes to 182 +/- 9.0/105 +/- 5.0 mm Hg on a regime including captopril. The reported and observed incidence of adverse effects were as follows: maculopapular rash (one patient); urticaria and pruritus (three patients); loss of taste (one patient); tachycardia (four patients); increased frequency of trivial infections (three patients); severe myalgia (one patient); and deterioration in renal function (one patient). However, these patients were able to continue captopril after either temporary withdrawal or dose reduction. Captopril was discontinued permanently in five patients, in two because of poor blood pressure control, in one who developed persistent severe urticaria, and in one because of marked proteinuria. In the fifth patient intractable diarrhoea occurred. Captopril lowers blood pressure very effectively in patients with severe hypertension refractory to other agents. Adverse effects are common but acceptable in this situation where prognosis is poor if blood pressure is not adequately controlled.
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PMID:Efficacy and adverse effects of captopril in severe refractory hypertension. 617 29

Captopril, an oral active dipeptidylcarboxypeptidase inhibitor with antihypertensive properties, has been reported to have the following cutaneous side effects: macular and papular skin eruptions, urticaria, angioedema, mouth ulcers, pemphigus, and pityriasis rosea-like eruptions. Here, to the best of our knowledge, is the first case in which a pityriasis rosea-like eruption evolved into a lichenoid drug eruption. Also discussed is the remarkable similarity in the side effects of captopril, gold compounds, d-penicillamine, and organic mercurials.
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PMID:Lichenoid eruption produced by captopril. 621 69

Captopril was used for treatment resistant arterial hypertension in 17 dialysis patients. Excellent blood-pressure control with diastolic blood-pressure less than 95 mmHg was obtained in 10 out of 17 patients (59%), with captopril as only drug in 8 patients. Six patients have been treated more than 6 months and 4 patients have been on the treatment for 1 year. The dosage of captopril could be kept low with maintained antihypertensive and angiotensin converting enzyme blocking effects. The acute blood-pressure lowering effect of captopril in dialysis patients was correlated to the initial plasma renin activity (p less than 0.001) but not long-term treatment, which was successful also in several low-renin patients. A few adverse reactions were encountered, e.g. urticaria and bullous exanthema, but all resolved when captopril treatment was stopped. Plasma potassium increased only from 4.8 +/- 0.1 to 5.0 +/- 0.1 mmol/l at the end of 1 month's treatment. Captopril appears to be a valuable drug for treatment of arterial hypertension in dialysis patients and offers an alternative to bilateral nephrectomy for the management of treatment resistant hypertension in these patients.
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PMID:Captopril treatment in hypertensive dialysis patients. 676 61