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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
There has been increasing interest regarding the use of Corynebacterium parvum (CP) with other modalities in the management of primary cancer. Due to the paucity of specific information available relative to CP toxicity, a Phase I study was carried out in patients with advanced disease. The purpose of the investigation was not to evaluate the effect of CP on tumor growth. from 273 injections of CP in 40 patients it was observed that following intravenous (i.v.) infusion of CP: a) a febrile response and chills of considerable severity occured in almost all patients and did not appreciably diminish in intensity following repetitive administrations; b) nausea,
vomiting
, headache, and
confusion
were not infrequent; c) a "flu-like" syndrome lasting 24 to 48 hours occurred following almost all courses of CP; d) blood pressure elevations occurred on occasion and were related to the severity of other-side-effects; hyper- or hypo- tension was not a problem; e) ther were no anaphalactic reactions. Pretreatment with a single administration of 100 mg of hydrocortisone prior to CP infusion markedly and in some instances dramatically diminished the toxicity and made acceptable the use of i.v. CP on an outpatient basis. The use of i.v. CP in patients with cerebral metasteses may be hazardous. Subcutaneously administered CP resulted in a significant number of undesirable local reactions. Evaluation of delayed cutaneous hypersensitivity response, immunoglobulins, complement, and E- and EAC-rosette-forming cells during CP administration failed to demonstrate significant change from injection values. Results were similar whether hydrocortisone pretreatment was or was not employed. From the standpoint of toxicity it now seems appropriate to use i.v. CP, particularly following pretreatment with hydrocortisone, in a controlled clinical trial to evaluate its therapeutic effectiveness in the management of primary cancer.
...
PMID:Observations following Corynebacterium parvum administration to patients with advanced malignancy. a phase I study. 94 9
As a causative factor in spontaneous subarachnoid hemorrhage, vascular anomalies, especially aneurysm or arteriovenous malformation, have been generally recognized. On the other hand, subarachnoid hemorrhage from brain tumor and cryptic vascular malformation are rare. We experienced two cases showing subarachnoid hemorrhage from angioblastic meningioma and vascular hamartoma as an initial symptom. Case 1: A 48-year-old woman, who complained of severe headache and
vomiting
on Feb. 10th, 1972, gradually became lethargic. Lumbar puncture revealed moderately hemorrhagic C.S.F.. On the fifth day after the onset, she was admitted to our hospital. On admission she showed disorientation and disturbance of resent memory. Aphasia and agnosia were slightly observed. On ophthalmologic examination right homonymous lower quadrant hemianopsia was observed. The carotid angiogram showed slight square shift of the anterior cerebral artery to the right side, elevation of the middle serebral artery and a homogeneous tumor stain in the occipital region in capillary phase. A walnut sized tumor invading the middle portion of the left lateral sinus and showing firm adhesion to the tentrium was found. There was an intracerebral hematoma behined the tumor. The tumor, the tentrium and the lateral sinus were extirpated en bloc and the intracerebral hematoma was aspirated. Histologically, the tumor was angioblastic meningioma. Case 2: A 7-year-old boy, who complained of severe abrupt headache, nuchal pain and
vomiting
on Sept. 17th, 1972, became gradually lethargic. Lumbar puncture revealed hemorrhagic C.S.F., On the tenth day after the onset, he was admitted to our hospital. He showed
confusion
and agitation. The carotid angiogram showed an unrolling of the pericallosal artery, but no findings of space taking lesions. An air study indicated a globular filling defect protruding into the anterior horn of the right lateral ventricle. The tumor located in the laterobasal wall of the anterior horn was removed picemiel by transventricular approach. Histologically, the tumor was vascular hamartoma. Furthermore, we discussed various brain tumors showing subarachnoid hemorrhage as an initial symptom, its frequency and bleeding mechanism on the literature.
...
PMID:[Two cases showing subarachnoid hemorrhage from angioblastic meningioma and vascular hamartoma (author's transl)]. 98 94
The effect of a new dopaminergic agonist, piribedil, was studied in 16 patients with Parkinson's disease and compared with placebo and L-DOPA. Piribedil appeared to have a moderate therapeutic effect that was significantly less than that of L-DOPA. Tremor appeared to be the main clinical feature to benefit. Nausea,
vomiting
, and somnolence were most frequent during the buildup of treatment and
confusion
and hallucinations during long-term treatment. Piribedil caused a significant decrease in probenecid-induced accumulation of HVA in the CSF, suggesting reduced turnover of endogenous dopamine in the brain. There was a significant relationship between dopamine receptor activation by piribedil and improvement of parkinsonian disability.
...
PMID:Dopaminergic agonist effects on Parkinsonian clinical features and brain monamine metabolism. 109 75
A total of 25 patients with metastatic renal cancer were treated on a phase II protocol with 5 days of continuous-infusion fluorodeoxyuridine (FUDR), (0.1 mg/kg daily) together with high-dose oral leucovorin (100 mg 4 h) and daily x6 high-dose interferon-alpha 2b (30 x 10(6) IU/m2). Despite the good performance status of the patients and the inclusion of 14 previously untreated patients in the cohort, no response was observed among the 20 evaluable patients. Toxicities included high fever, moderate anemia, transient leukopenia, transient and mild elevations of transaminases, and moderate to severe nausea,
vomiting
, diarrhea, and mucositis. There were also two episodes each of
confusion
, fluid retention, and pancreatitis and one episode of increased creatinine levels. During the study three deaths occurred, two of which were possibly therapy-related. Despite previous reports of activity of FUDR in metastatic renal cancer, the present regimen cannot be recommended.
...
PMID:Continuous-infusion fluorodeoxyuridine with leucovorin and high-dose interferon: a phase II study in metastatic renal-cell cancer. 146 58
Health practitioners interviewed the parents or the guardians of 45 patients at the Children's Outpatient Department (COPD) of Angau Memorial Hospital in Lae in Morobe Province in Papua New Guinea to determine compliance levels in these children (Study 1). They also monitored and recorded adequacy of oral treatment among 348 pediatric patients given oral medication in the COPD (Study 2). In Study 1, 62% of the patients had good compliance with prescribed medication. Even though compliance was better for those who received injectable medications than it was for those who received oral medications (72% vs. 52%), the difference was not significant. Referred patients were more compliant than review patients (76% vs, 54%), but this difference was also not significant. Clinic staff explained the illness and medicine usage to most parents or guardians with poor compliance (82% and 76%, respectively). Of the 13 parents or guardians who had received instructions about medicine usage, 69% (9) claimed to have understood medicine usage. Respiratory infections were the leading disease of patients with poor compliance (about 77%). The antibiotics included intramuscular procaine penicillin, oral amoxicillin, oral erythromycin, and oral chloramphenicol. The most common reasons for noncompliance, in descending order, were distance to the clinic for repeat injectable medication, forgetfulness,
confusion
, and prescription not filled. In Study 2, poor compliance stood at 7%, yet none of these patients refused medication. Poor compliance was due to spitting out the medicine or
vomiting
within 5 minutes of ingestion. Health practitioners need to consider each child individually to optimize drug compliance. They should take into consideration side effects of the drug, distance from home to the clinic when repeated injections are indicated, and symptoms of the disease such as
vomiting
.
...
PMID:Compliance profiles of paediatric patients in an outpatient department. 150 17
We examined potential clinical and pathologic correlates of seizures among the 3,291 children in the Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium database. Fourteen percent had seizures prior to their hospitalization for a brain tumor. Among children who had a supratentorial tumor, seizures occurred in 22% of those less than 14 years of age. The prevalence of seizures increased to 68% of older teenagers. Among children with an infratentorial tumor, the prevalence of seizures was relatively constant at 6% over all age groups. The onset of seizures began more than one year prior to surgical tumor removal in over half of the children aged five or more with supratentorial tumors, significantly longer than for those of the same age with infratentorial tumors. Almost all children (98.9%) with an infratentorial tumor and seizures had at least one other symptom and more than three-fourths of them had at least three. Eighty-nine percent of children with a supratentorial tumor and seizures had at least one other symptom and more than one-half had at least three symptoms. Regardless of whether the tumor was above or below the tentorium,
confusion
or stupor and coma were more common in children with seizures than in children without seizures. Among children with supratentorial tumors, symptoms of a declining academic performance or an abnormality of personality, speech, walking, or sensation were significantly more frequent in children with seizures, while visual symptoms (other than visual loss or diplopia) and nausea or
vomiting
were less frequent. Among children with supratentorial tumors, those who had seizures were more likely to have paralysis of an arm, hand, or face,
confusion
or stupor, or coma and less likely to exhibit irritability, papilledema, optic atrophy, decreased visual acuity, pupillary abnormalities, or abducens paresis. Among children with infratentorial tumors, those with seizures were significantly less likely to have truncal ataxia, but more likely to experience
confusion
, stupor, or coma. In the supratentorial compartment, astrocytoma (nos), protoplasmic astrocytoma, anaplastic astrocytoma, and ependymoma were more frequently associated with seizures than was craniopharyngioma. No infratentorial tumor type was more or less likely to be associated with seizures. All common tumor types that were represented in both the supratentorial and the infratentorial compartment except astrocytoma (nos) were associated with significantly greater rates of seizures when located in the supratentorial compartment. The tumor location with the highest incidence of seizures was, as expected, the superficial cerebrum. More than 40% of the children with such tumors had seizures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Epidemiology of seizures in children with brain tumors. The Childhood Brain Tumor Consortium. 154 79
2 AIDS patients are described who had cryptococcal meningitis accompanied by increased intracranial pressure (ICP) and visual complications, a finding thought to be relatively rare in AIDS. Of the 2-6% of AIDS patients who develop cryptococcal meningitis, many have disseminated and recurrent infections. The 1st case was a 45-year old Ugandan woman who presented with stiff neck, and right VIth cranial nerve palsy. She was treated with amphotericin B and flucytosine with some improvement, but on the 9th day she awoke with headache, drowsiness, and total blindness, although no papilledema. Her CSF pressure was 40 cm H20. She recovered after a month of intravenous chemotherapy and acetazolamide, but remained blind. Her sudden blindness was thought to be due to bilateral optic nerve infarction. The 2nd case was a 32-year old male homosexual, admitted with headache,
vomiting
,
confusion
, and drowsiness. He had stiff neck, and a CSF of 40 cm containing Cryptococcus neoformans. He was given amphotericin B, flucytosine, and has CSF drained every other day. On day 21 papilledema was seen in the right eye, and acetazolamide was started to lower CSF pressure. This patient recovered without loss of vision. 3 published series of cryptococcus meningitis in AIDS patients remarked about the low incidence of raised ICP, while 1 reported 9 of 27 with neurological and ophthalmic complications. The visual complications and increased ICP in these patients was thought to be due to inflammatory arachnoiditis or direct cryptococcal infiltration.
...
PMID:Raised intracranial pressure and visual complications in AIDS patients with cryptococcal meningitis. 156 10
A 16 year-old girl was admitted to our hospital complaining of headache and
vomiting
. She was born with an orbital lymphangioma, which was resected partially at a younger age. On admission she had mild
confusion
and light neck stiffness as neurological positive findings. Enhanced CT scan showed an eight-figure enhancement at the straight sinus and a linear enhancement at the vermis. Angiography showed venous thrombosis spreading in the deep cerebral veins and the right superior ophthalmic vein. Furthermore a medullary venous malformation (MVM) was disclosed in the posterior fossa. Administration of urokinase and glycerol relieved her symptoms gradually. After that treatment, partial recanalization of the deep cerebral veins and the straight sinus and disappearance of the MVM were recognized in the second angiography. In the present case, the MVM played an important role as collateral channel. But, in general, when venous thrombosis occurs, collateral circulation is maintained by cork-screw vessels, not by MVM. In the light of the presence of the lymphangioma, the present case was thought to be a rare condition in the venous system. It appears that residual fetal vessels have existed in the posterior fossa from birth. It is considered that the residual fetal vessels opened and dilated temporally and were recognized as an MVM in angiography, when cerebral venous flow was disturbed by the venous thrombosis.
...
PMID:[A case of venous thrombosis associated with medullary venous malformation]. 157 70
Ifosfamide is an oxazaphosphorine alkylating agent with a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity. It is a prodrug metabolised in the liver by cytochrome P450 mixed-function oxidase enzymes to isofosforamide mustard, the active alkylating compound. Mesna, a uroprotective thiol agent, is routinely administered concomitantly with ifosfamide, and has almost eliminated ifosfamide-induced haemorrhagic cystitis and has reduced nephron toxicity. Therapeutic studies, mostly noncomparative in nature, have demonstrated the efficacy of ifosfamide/mesna alone, or more commonly as a component of combination regimens, in a variety of cancers. In patients with relapsed or refractory disseminated nonseminomatous testicular cancer, a salvage regimen of ifosfamide/mesna, cisplatin and either etoposide or vinblastine produced complete response in approximately one-quarter of patients. As a component of both induction and salvage chemotherapeutic regimens, ifosfamide/mesna has produced favourable response rates in small cell lung cancer, paediatric solid tumours, non-Hodgkin's and Hodgkin's lymphoma, and ovarian cancer. Induction therapy with ifosfamide/mesna-containing chemotherapeutic regimens has been encouraging in non-small cell lung cancer, adult soft-tissue sarcomas, and as neoadjuvant therapy in advanced cervical cancer. As salvage therapy, ifosfamide/mesna-containing combinations have a palliative role in advanced breast cancer and advanced cervical cancer. Ifosfamide/mesna can elicit responses in patients refractory to numerous other antineoplastic drugs, including cyclophosphamide. With administration of concomitant mesna to protect against ifosfamide-induced urotoxicity, the principal dose-limiting toxicity of ifosfamide is myelosuppression; leucopenia is generally more severe than thrombocytopenia. Reversible CNS adverse effects ranging from mild somnolence and
confusion
to severe encephalopathy and coma can occur in approximately 10 to 20% of patients after intravenous infusion, and the incidence of neurotoxicity may be increased to 50% after oral administration because of differences in the preferential route of metabolism between the 2 routes of administration. Other adverse effects of ifosfamide include nephrotoxicity, alopecia, and nausea/
vomiting
. In general, intravenously administered mesna is associated with a low incidence of adverse effects; however, gastrointestinal disturbances are common following oral administration. Thus, ifosfamide/mesna is an important and worthwhile addition to the currently available range of chemotherapeutic agents. It has a broad spectrum of antineoplastic activity and causes less marked myelosuppression than many other cytotoxic agents. At present, the role of ifosfamide/mesna in refractory germ cell testicular cancer is clearly defined; however, its overall place in the treatment of other forms of cancer awaits delineation in future well-controlled comparative studies.
...
PMID:Ifosfamide/mesna. A review of its antineoplastic activity, pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic efficacy in cancer. 172 Mar 82
The clinical and pathologic features of 15 new cases of the uncommon primary or granulomatous angiitis of the central nervous system (PACNS) are described. To date, only 108 such cases have been reported in the English literature. Clinically, most PACNS patients have been young or middle-aged (mean age, 45 years; range, 3 to 96 years), with men outnumbering women slightly by a ratio of 4 to 3. The most frequent presenting complaints are headache, weakness, and
confusion
; less common complaints are aphasia, dysphasia, nausea or
vomiting
, loss of memory, and seizure disorder. There is usually no evidence of a systemic disease; the erythrocyte sedimentation rate is almost invariably normal, and there are no diagnostic laboratory tests. The cerebral angiogram usually shows multifocal, segmental stenosis or irregularity of small and medium-sized leptomeningeal and intracranial blood vessels, often with a beading or aneurysmal appearance, and alterations in blood flow in the affected regions. Anatomically, the angiitis is focal and segmental in distribution. An isolated negative biopsy, therefore, does not rule out the disease. Histologically, PACNS may be granulomatous, necrotizing, or lymphocytic in character, and mixed morphologic types often occur. Large- and small-vessel thrombosis is common. Acute lesions frequently coexist with healing or healed lesions. Involvement of extracranial blood vessels occurs only rarely. Past or current herpes zoster infection and Hodgkin's lymphoma are the most noteworthy clinical associations of PACNS, but whether they are causally related remains uncertain.
...
PMID:Primary (granulomatous) angiitis of the central nervous system: a clinicopathologic analysis of 15 new cases and a review of the literature. 174 Mar
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