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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This chapter addresses the role of health professionals in providing abortions and examines the dynamic technology of this field. Once the decision to perform an abortion is made, the proper procedure must be selected. Gestational age is the fundamental determinant but the experience and capability of the practitioner are also crucial. Suction curettage is the safest and most effective procedure available for abortions performed within 10 weeks of conception. Evaluation of the abortion patient should include, at a minimum, tests for hemoglobin, presence of gonococci, and Rh type. One of the most important parts of preparation for an abortion is sensitive and searching counseling. A potentially serious complication of suction curettage is perforation of the uterus. Dilatation and evacuation (D and E), is similar to the suction curettage procedure. This method may be used for gestations of 20 or more weeks after conception and requires greater operator expertise and experience. The complications of D and E are similar to those of suction curettage but are more frequent. Amnioinfusion is currently the most widely used method of pregnancy termination after 14 weeks in the US. The abortifacient agent that has had the greatest use is hypertonic saline. Morbidity associated with saline amnioinfusion includes hemorrhage requiring transfusion, retained tissue requiring manual or surgical removal infection, coagulopathy, and hypernatremia. Prostaglandins are alternative abortifacient agents. A disadvantage of using prostaglandins to induce abortion is that they frequently require repeat doses to be effective. Other disadvantages include nausea, vomiting, diarhea, and bronchospasm. Urea is anther effective abortifacient agent.
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PMID:Abortion. 38 51

The introduction of dinoprost tromethamine (Prostin F2 Alpha) as an abortifacient in the second trimester of pregnancy represents the first clinical use of a prostaglandin. Various synthetic analogues of the naturally occurring derivatives are being employed investigationally in the treatment of peptic ulcer, hypertension, asthma, and hypercalcemia. In the United States, dinoprost tromethamine is primarily administered intra-amniotically. Despite the fact that a substantial number of patients experience allergic reactions, hypertension, bronchospasm, nausea, vomiting, cramps, and diarrhea, the efficacy and relative safety of dinoprost tromethamine establish it as superior to intra-amniotic instillation of hypertonic saline. Cervical laceration, laceration or rupture of the lower uterine segment, retention of the placenta, and hemorrhage in part reflect the intensity of uterine contraction induced by dinoprost. Experience in administration improves the therapeutic response and diminishes adverse reactions.
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PMID:The prostaglandins. 117 7

Exercise myocardial-thallium scintigraphy plays a fundamental role in the diagnosis of coronary artery disease. Once exercise is not always feasible, pharmacological stress became a possible alternative. The authors review the mechanism of action, administrations protocols, indications and side effects of the drugs used for this purpose: dipyridamole, adenosine and dobutamine. Dipyridamole causes coronary hyperemia by increasing the interstitial levels of endogenous adenosine. Perfusion defects result from the mismatch of coronary reserve in different coronary territories. The drug administration is classically performed with a 0.142 mg/kg/min dosage e.v. for 4 minutes, total of 0.56 mg/kg. It is possible to use a greater dose of 0.84 mg/kg e.v. for 10 minutes, increasing sensitivity without loss of specificity for diagnosis of coronary artery disease. Oral dipyridamole protocols with 300 and 400 mg were used with similar results for sensitivity and specificity. The oral protocol has the disadvantage of delayed onset and longer action. Including several dipyridamole studies, 87% was obtained for sensitivity and 84% for specificity, in the diagnosis of CAD. Dipyridamole scintigraphy has been applied to myocardial infarction risk stratification, cardiac risk evaluation of patients proposed to noncardiac surgery and therapeutic efficacy evaluation of reperfusion techniques (angioplasty and surgery). The secondary effects of dipyridamole are frequent, however mild and well tolerated. They occur in half the patients, the most frequent, facial flushing (2%), dizziness (5%), nausea (4%), vomiting (1%), headaches (11%) and chest pain (26%). Some important complications were reported although rare: myocardial infarction, ventricular fibrillation and bronchospasm.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Role of pharmacologic stimulation with myocardial perfusion scintigraphy in the evaluation of patients with ischemic cardiopathy]. 129 Jun 55

Eighty-two patients were hospitalized following an accidental exposure to chlorine. All patients presented with dyspnoea and cough. The other symptoms included irritation of throat (53.6%), irritation of eyes (42.3%), headache (29.2%), abdominal pain (26.8%), vomiting (24.3%) and giddiness (9.7%). All of them had bronchospasm and 5 (6%) had cyanosis at the onset. An x-ray of the chest revealed patchy infiltrates in 3 (3.85%) and hilar congestion in 2 (2.44%). Pulmonary function tests showed an obstructive pattern in 27.4%, restrictive in 3.25% and mixed in 53.2%. Pulmonary functions were normal in 16.1% of the patients. Bronchoscopy revealed tracheobronchial mucosal congestion in all cases, hemorrhagic spots in 35.7%, erosions and ulcers in 12.5%. All patients were treated with oxygen, aminophylline, hydrocortisone and antibiotics. Haematemesis (n = 1) and pulmonary oedema (n = 2) developed 12 hours after the admission. Two other patients developed pneumonia 48 hours later. All patients recovered satisfactorily. On follow-up 16 patients had no sequelae after one year. Pulmonary functions were normal in 5 patients after 3 years of follow-up.
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PMID:Acute accidental exposure to chlorine fumes--a study of 82 cases. 145 67

A multicenter study was performed to determine the incidence of adverse reactions to two contrast media with similar low osmolality during cardiac angiography. The study was of a randomized double-blind design comparing ioxaglate (an ionic dimer) and iopamidol (a nonionic compound) and included 500 patients; 250 patients received ioxaglate and 250 iopamidol. There were 58 adverse reactions attributed to the contrast media in the ioxaglate group and 29 in the iopamidol group (p less than 0.001). Chest pain occurred in 11 patients in the ioxaglate group compared with 5 in the iopamidol group (p = 0.123). Nausea or vomiting was present in 20 and 2 patients, respectively (p less than 0.0003). Allergic adverse reactions, such as bronchospasm, urticaria and itching, occurred in 15 of the ioxaglate group and only 1 of the patients receiving iopamidol (p less than 0.0007). Fifty-two patients in the ioxaglate group had a known allergic history (not to contrast medium) or asthma, whereas 77 receiving iopamidol had a similar history. Seven of the 52 ioxaglate-treated patients developed an allergic adverse reaction compared with none of the 77 in the iopamidol group (p = 0.001). Of 41 patients receiving ioxaglate who were premedicated with diphenhydramine, 4 had an allergic adverse event. In the iopamidol group 45 patients received similar premedication and none had an allergic adverse reaction (p less than 0.03). Thus, this multicenter study shows that adverse reactions occur more often with ioxaglate than with iopamidol and that patients with an allergic history have a greater risk with ioxaglate therapy compared with iopamidol.
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PMID:Adverse reactions of low osmolality contrast media during cardiac angiography: a prospective randomized multicenter study. 155 9

The major use of N-acetylcysteine in clinical toxicology is in the treatment of acetaminophen (paracetamol) overdosage. The hepatorenal toxicity of acetaminophen is mediated by a reactive metabolite normally detoxified by reduced glutathione. If glutathione is depleted, covalent binding to macromolecules and/or oxidation of thiol enzymes can lead to cell death. Oral or intravenous N-acetylcysteine or oral D,L-methionine mitigates acetaminophen-induced hepatorenal damage if given within 10 hours, but becomes less effective thereafter. In vivo, N-acetylcysteine forms L-cysteine, cystine, L-methionine, glutathione, and mixed disulfides; L-methionine also forms cysteine, thus giving rise to glutathione and other products. Oral therapy with N-acetylcysteine or methionine for acetaminophen poisoning is contraindicated in the presence of coma or vomiting, or if activated charcoal has been given by mouth. Nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may also occur as a result of oral N-acetylcysteine administration. Anaphylactoid reactions including angioedema, bronchospasm, flushing, hypotension, nausea/vomiting, rash, tachycardia, and respiratory distress may occur 15-60 minutes into N-acetylcysteine infusion (20 hours intravenous regimen) in up to 10% of patients. Following accidental intravenous overdosage, the adverse reactions of N-acetylcysteine are similar but more severe; fatalities have occurred. A reduction in the loading dose of N-acetylcysteine may reduce the risk of adverse reactions while maintaining efficacy. Administration of N-acetylcysteine for a longer period might provide enhanced protection for patients in whom acetaminophen absorption or elimination is delayed. N-acetylcysteine may also have a role in the treatment of toxicity from carbon tetrachloride, chloroform, 1,2-dichloropropane, and other compounds. The possible use of N-acetylcysteine and other agents in the prevention of the neuropsychiatric sequelae of acute carbon monoxide poisoning is an important area for future research.
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PMID:Use of N-acetylcysteine in clinical toxicology. 192 4

A 31-year-old man being treated for asthma accidently received 3 mg SQ epinephrine. He began retching and vomiting and developed agitation and profuse diaphoresis. He was treated with 5 mg IV labetalol. His symptoms improved significantly, and he required no further treatment. Although he felt a transient increase in his respiratory effort shortly after administration of the drug, he did not develop wheezing or require additional therapy for bronchospasm. The beta-blocking effect of labetalol is greater than the alpha antagonism. The patient exhibited evidence of mild alpha stimulation due to incomplete blockade. This is consistent with previous studies in that labetalol tends to less completely antagonize the alpha effects of a mixed alpha/beta agonist, resulting in a net clinical picture of mild alpha agonism.
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PMID:Labetalol in the treatment of epinephrine overdose. 234 87

A total of 65 patients with food allergy which manifested primarily by disorders of the gastrointestinal tract, bronchi and skin were placed under observation. The patients were administered sodium chromoglycate (nalcrom) per os in a dose of 200 mg 4 times a day for 2-3 weeks, in part of cases up to 3 months and even up to 1-1.5 year. The skin manifestations of allergy (pruritus, urticaria, Quincke's edema, and eczematous rash), abdominal pain, diarrhea, vomiting, bronchospasm, rhinitis, and conjunctivitis disappeared. At the same time the majority of the patients demonstrated the reduction of the intensity of skin responses to the administration of different food antigens, the decrease of the antibody titer in blood serum in response to food antigens, and of the IgE content in blood. The side effects (nausea, heartburn, intensification of skin itch and abdominal pain) were noted in 4 cases.
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PMID:[Treatment of patients with food allergy using Nalcrom]. 249 73

The authors reviewed 100 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) conducted in humans to compare safety or efficacy of new low-osmolality contrast media (LOM) with that of high-osmolality contrast media (HOM). Findings of the 43 RCTs judged to be of the highest quality suggest that the efficacy of LOM in imaging is equal or superior to that of HOM for all routes of administration. Heat sensation occurred less often with LOM for all routes and pain occurred less often with LOM for intraarterial routes. No differences were seen in nephrotoxicity or in frequency of nausea, vomiting, urticaria, bronchospasm, laboratory test abnormalities, or neurologic events. Greater cardiovascular changes were seen with HOM, including increased or decreased heart rate, increased left ventricular end-diastolic pressure, decreased systolic pressure, and QT prolongation, depending on route of administration. To demonstrate whether a reduction in clinically significant adverse outcomes truly occurs with LOM, trials will need to enlist larger numbers of patients and employ appropriate outcome measures. Future trials should stratify patients according to their risk of adverse reactions to provide better information about benefits of LOM in low- versus high-risk patients.
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PMID:Results of randomized controlled trials of low-versus high-osmolality contrast media. 182 61

In an attempt to clarify whether gastroesophageal reflux (GER) accounts for some respiratory manifestations (RM) we have measured 55 variables of extended distal esophageal pH metering in 70 children with both GER and RM, in 31 with GER only and in 10 controls. Patients in the first group were followed up after GER cure (either medical or surgical) and divided into two subgroups according to persistence or relief/cure of their RM. The best predictor of good respiratory results was a mean duration of nocturnal episodes of GER longer than 5'26". Patients who, in addition, had a history of vomiting and did not suffer from bronchospasm had 95% chances of having permanent cure of their RM after GER treatment.
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PMID:[Clinical and pH-measured study of gastroesophageal reflux in children with respiratory manifestations]. 267 75


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