Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042961 (volvulus)
4,305 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Onchocerca volvulus worms in nodules from Guatemalan patients treated with four, eight, or 11 single doses of ivermectin (150 micrograms/kg of body weight) that were given once every three months were examined by routine histologic techniques and compared with worms in control nodules from untreated persons living in the same location over the same time periods. All treated nodules were removed four months after the last dose of ivermectin, i.e., 13, 25, or 34 months after the start of the trial. At the 25th and 34th months, i.e., after the eighth or eleventh doses of ivermectin, there were excess mortalities in female worms of 25.5% and 32.6%, respectively, over and above the levels in controls. Furthermore, the proportions of live females still producing scanty embryos up to the gastrula stage were only 7.7% and 18.2%, and no females were producing microfilariae. Ivermectin given at 3-month intervals also reduced significantly the mean numbers of live male worms in nodules, as well as the proportions of inseminated females. This regimen was effective in preventing embryogenesis to the microfilarial stage while, at the same time, it caused a slow but steady attrition of the adult worms.
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PMID:Effects of three-month doses of ivermectin on adult Onchocerca volvulus. 153 54

Ivermectin, a derivative of avermectin B, is an orally effective microfilaricidal agent. It is the current drug of choice for treating patients infected with the nematode Onchocerca volvulus, which is a major cause of blindness in inhabitants of some tropical areas. Ivermectin is administered orally as a single dose of 150 micrograms/kg given annually. Skin and ocular microfilarial counts are dramatically reduced after the first dose, with some evidence for a resulting decrease in transmission of infection by the blackfly vector. With the exception of rare serious reactions such as severe systemic postural hypotension, ivermectin is generally well tolerated. The drug has the clear advantages of ease of administration and better tolerability compared with diethylcarbamazine and suramin, agents previously used to treat onchocerciasis. Thus, ivermectin is suitable for inclusion in mass treatment programmes and is the best therapeutic option presently available to combat onchocerciasis. As such it provides hope for many thousands of people at risk of becoming blind, and represents a major contribution to tropical medicine.
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PMID:Ivermectin. A review of its antifilarial activity, pharmacokinetic properties and clinical efficacy in onchocerciasis. 172 66

Ivermectin is a safe, effective microfilaricide and microfilarial suppressant for Onchocerca volvulus; but in single doses of 100-200 micrograms/kg body weight it has no macrofilaricidal action. The present trial aimed to determine whether 6 doses of 100 micrograms/kg ivermectin, given at 2-week intervals, would kill the adult worms. Eighty-two nodules from 28 otherwise healthy adult male Liberian patients treated with this ivermectin schedule, and 102 nodules from a similar group of 25 control patients, were removed four months after the last dose of ivermectin. They were coded and assessed in a masked fashion either by routine histology or by examination of whole worms extracted from the nodules after collagenase digestion. The drug had no visible effect on adult male worms. More adult female worms were assessed as moribund or dead in the ivermectin-treated group than in the control group (for the collagenase digests P = 0.09; for the histological assessment P = 0.47). The data suggest that repeated dosage with ivermectin may lead to a slow attrition of some female worms and this possibility should be investigated in patients receiving regular doses every 3, 6 or 12 months as part of onchocerciasis control programmes.
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PMID:Viability of adult Onchocerca volvulus after six 2-weekly doses of ivermectin. 186 Jan 46

Ten Sudanese patients with Onchocerca volvulus infection were treated with a single oral dose of 150 micrograms/kg of ivermectin. Plasma samples were collected before treatment, 0.5, 1, 3, 4, 6, 12 hours and 1, 2, 3, 7, and 30 days. Four patients were selected for nodulectomies and skin biopsies at 6, 18 and 30 hours and 3 days post treatment. Using these samples O. volvulus worm fragments were dissected free of host nodular tissues for ivermectin extraction. Ivermectin was present in the nodular tissue at 6 hr and persisted for 3 days. It was also detected in an individual worm tissue extract at a concentration similar to the nodule, but in subcutaneous fascial tissue higher concentrations were sometimes found. Ivermectin was detected by radioimmunoassay in the plasma of all patients at 1 hr and peak concentrations were reached in an average of 5.6 hr. The drug persisted at detectable levels for 7 days in 70% of the studied patients. Plasma samples were also collected from 16 treated Mexican onchocerciasis patients before ivermectin treatment and 4 hr treatment and from six individuals who served as controls. The Mexican patients had concentrations of ivermectin in their plasma similar to those in the Sudanese patients.
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PMID:Ivermectin uptake and distribution in the plasma and tissue of Sudanese and Mexican patients infected with Onchocerca volvulus. 189 77

The effects of a single dose of ivermectin (122-200 micrograms/kg) on Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae (mf) in skin and lymph nodes were studied histologically in a qualitative and quantitative manner over seven days after treatment. Ivermectin caused mf to move from the subepidermal layer into the deeper layers of the dermis, subcutaneous fat and connective tissue, and the regional lymph nodes. No mf were seen migrating upwards through the epidermis. Dead mf were not seen before 24 hr and the numbers found dead in the dermis were far fewer than the total numbers in the skin before treatment. Inflammatory cellular reaction around dead mf in the tissues was usually minimal. The results suggest that most of the mf which disappear from the skin may be destroyed in the lymph nodes and that the histological reaction excited by mf dying under ivermectin is less violent than that after diethylcarbamazine.
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PMID:Migration and death of skin-dwelling Onchocerca volvulus microfilariae after treatment with ivermectin. 205 52

Ivermectin is a macrocyclic lactone (fermentation) product and actinomycete (Streptomyces avermitilis) that possesses an unusually broad spectrum of potent activity against several species of nematodes, arachnids, and insects that parasitize domestic animals. From clinical trials in humans it has been found to be microfilaricidal, killing microfilariae of Onchocerca volvulus (the parasite causing onchocerciasis), and interrupting its transmission by the black fly vector. Dermal microfilariae density in patients are reduced to near zero levels for 6-12 months after a single oral dose of ivermectin 0.15-0.2 mg/kg. Its precise mechanism of action is unknown. It has a time to maximum concentration of 2.7-4.3 h, and an elimination half-life of 28 +/- 10 h. When compared with an oral solution the tablet dosage form has a relative bioavailability of approximately 60 percent. Not much is known about its metabolism in humans, and the unchanged drug is not detected in the urine. Controlled clinical trials have shown ivermectin to be associated with milder side effects than diethylcarbamazine, the current drug of choice for onchocerciasis therapy. It does not cause the severe Mazzoti-type (anaphylactoid) reactions that are associated with diethylcarbamazine use. Ivermectin is effective, safer, and more tolerable than diethylcarbamazine. It should, therefore, replace diethylcarbamazine as the drug of choice for onchocerciasis therapy.
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PMID:Ivermectin: a long-acting microfilaricidal agent. 218 96

Community trials were started to address questions concerning the safety of ivermectin during large scale treatment, its potential for transmission control, its effect in preventing ocular onchocercal disease, its acceptability and the organization of large scale treatment. A summary is presented of the major, latest results on the short-term epidemiological impact of large scale ivermectin treatment, as observed in eight community trials undertaken in the Onchocerciasis Control Programme in West Africa (OCP). Ivermectin treatment resulted in a 96%-99% reduction in the mean load of microfilariae (mf) in the skin in treated patients. The subsequent mf-repopulation of the skin was faster than in the clinical trials and after 12 months the mean loads had returned to more than 40% of the pre-treatment load. Ocular mf loads were also greatly reduced and a post-treatment regression of early lesions of the anterior segment of the eye was observed. The transmission of Onchocerca volvulus was reduced by some 60% during the first year after treatment in one trial but no additional reduction was observed after the second treatment round. These results, and other recent research findings, have been used to quantify an epidemiological model for the transmission and control of onchocerciasis. Preliminary results of computer simulations of the predicted long-term epidemiological impact of large scale ivermectin treatment indicate that ivermectin treatment may play a very important role in disease control but that it is unlikely to become a practical tool for transmission control in endemic foci. Ivermectin treatment appears to be the most appropriate method for control of recrudescence of infection in an area where the parasite reservoir has been virtually eliminated by vector control, such as in the core area of the OCP.
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PMID:Large scale ivermectin distribution and its epidemiological consequences. 219 50

Ivermectin, a recently developed macrocyclic lactone with broad antiparasitic activity, has been shown by a series of clinical trials to be safe and effective in the treatment of human infection with Onchocerca volvulus. Although it is rapidly microfilaricidal, it does not cause a severe reaction as is seen with diethylcarbamazine treatment. In patients with onchocerciasis, a single oral dose of ivermectin (150 micrograms/Kg) repeated once a year leads to a marked reduction in skin microfilaria counts and ocular involvement, although ivermectin has no known long-lasting effects on the adult worms. With treatment there is no significant exacerbation of either anterior or posterior segment eye disease even in those with severe ocular disease. Treatment leads to a marked and prolonged improvement in ocular status. Because of its safety and efficacy, ivermectin can be used on a mass scale and promises to revolutionize the treatment of onchocerciasis.
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PMID:Ivermectin treatment of ocular onchocerciasis. 219 51

This paper assesses the effects on adult Onchocerca volvulus of monthly doses of ivermectin (150 micrograms/kg) given over 4, 8, and 12 months to patients in Guatemala. Nodules were removed 4 months after the last dose; the adult O. volvulus were extracted by collagenase digestion, studied by histological techniques, and compared with worms from untreated patients. Twelve monthly doses killed a proportion of the adult worms (12% of males and 22% of females), leaving the remainder relatively unaffected and the females slowly resuming embryogenesis. After 8 and 12 doses, a number of female worms had resumed embryogenesis in 1 genital tract only, and in 1 female a total degeneration of 1 ovary was seen. Ivermectin also led to a marked drop in the number of male worms in nodules. No serious adverse reactions occurred and the treatment was well accepted.
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PMID:Effects of multiple monthly doses of ivermectin on adult Onchocerca volvulus. 226 70

Ivermectin is a macrocyclic lactone that has widespread antiparasitic activity. Numerous clinical trials have shown that ivermectin is safe and effective in the treatment of human infection with Onchocerca volvulus. Although it is rapidly microfilaricidal, it does not cause a severe reaction, as is seen with diethylcarbamazine treatment. The drug temporarily interrupts production of microfilaria but has not known long-lasting effects on the adult worms. In patients with onchocerciasis, a single oral dose of ivermectin (150 micrograms/kg) repeated once a year leads to a marked reduction in skin microfilaria counts and ocular involvement. At this dose, ivermectin causes minimal side effects and is sufficiently free of severe reactions to be used on a mass scale. It promises to revolutionize the treatment of onchocerciasis.
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PMID:The status of ivermectin in the treatment of human onchocerciasis. 267 72


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