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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Severe or complicated malaria is defined by infestation by Plasmodium falciparum into all red blood cells, especially those in the brain, causing coma and repeated convulsions; severe anemia (6 g/dl hemoglobin, 20% hematocrit);
renal insufficiency
(265 mcmol/l creatinine, 400 ml/day diuresis); pulmonary edema; hypoglycemia (2.2 ml/l or 0.4 g/l); shock; diffuse hemorrhaging; massive hemoglobinuria; and blood acidosis. Other possible symptoms of severe malaria are clouded thinking, changes in behavior, and inability to focus. It is most common in people with no immunity to malaria (children aged 4 and travelers in endemic zones). Pregnancy, splenectomy, corticotherapy, or poorly maintained immunity status favor severe anemia in adults. Sources of chloroquine-resistant P. falciparum have existed since 1960. Resistance has since expanded from Southeast Asia and South America to Africa, posing treatment problems. Malaria usually begins with fever (40 or more degrees Celsius), headaches, muscular pain, digestive troubles (e.g., diarrhea, nausea, or
vomiting
), and abdominal pain. In suspected cases of malaria, a blood sample or a thick blood smear as well as treatment (even in the absence of parasitological proof) needs to be done as soon as possible. Intravenous quinine diluted in a 5-10% glucose solution should be delivered at a rate of 24 mg/kg/day. In the case of severe jaundice, the dose should be cut in half beginning 8 hours after treatment began. If intravenous delivery is impossible, intramuscular delivery should be done. Corticosteroids, anticoagulants, and aspirin are contraindicated. In 2-4 days, oral administration (chloroquine, halofantrine, or mefloquine) is warranted. 20% of malaria-related deaths among patients who receive treatment are due to complications of the central nervous system. Protection against mosquito bites prevents malaria. Chemoprophylaxis in endemic zones should be limited to short trips to malaria zones or to pregnant women.
...
PMID:[Severe malaria]. 1229 Jan 83
A 39-year-old woman had been investigated elsewhere due to symptomatic hypokalaemia, renal potassium wasting and metabolic alkalosis.
Vomiting
was considered to be the underlying cause but the patient repeatedly denied this behaviour. After extensive investigations, Bartter's syndrome was finally diagnosed. Eighteen months later the patient was readmitted due to progressive
renal insufficiency
. On the basis of a very low urinary chloride excretion and the aforementioned laboratory results, it was concluded that the metabolic disturbances were due to
vomiting
and the diagnosis of Bartter's syndrome was rejected. Upon being confronted with these findings, the patient finally admitted to
vomiting
, but stated that this happened involuntarily after meals. She had a stenotic ulcer in the pylorus and a gastric biopsy demonstrated the presence of Helicobacter pylori associated gastritis. Eradication therapy was given and the symptoms disappeared. The
renal insufficiency
was partly accounted for by hypovolaemia and partly by tubulointerstitial nephropathy (demonstrated by kidney biopsy) which was probably due to the chronic hypokalaemia. This case illustrates the difficulty of establishing the differential diagnosis of hypokalaemia, especially in the case of denied
vomiting
. However, it also shows that in such cases the correct diagnosis can be made if objective parameters are used.
...
PMID:[Clinical reasoning and decision-making in practice. A woman with hypokalaemia]. 1269 84
Hypercalcemia is a common, life-threatening metabolic disorder that can be associated with cancer. Its pathophysiology includes enhanced osteoclastic bone resorption and decreased renal excretion of extracellular calcium. Symptoms of hypercalcemia include nausea,
vomiting
, bone pain, polyuria,
renal insufficiency
, bradycardia, and arrhythmia. The goals of medical therapy are to inhibit bone resorption and promote renal calcium excretion. Hydration is the first step in management. Treatments for hypercalcemia include phosphates, calcitonin, bisphosphonates, and gallium nitrate. Although intravenous phosphates prevent intestinal calcium absorption and inhibit mineral and bone matrix resorption, serious adverse events include renal failure, hypotension, extraskeletal calcification, and severe hypocalcemia. Calcitonin has a rapid onset of action and can lower serum calcium concentrations within hours, but its usefulness is limited by its short duration of effect and the development of tachyphylaxis. Bisphosphonates are effective inhibitors of bone resorption but appear to have decreased response rates in hypercalcemic patients with high levels of parathyroid-related protein. Gallium nitrate, an antitumor agent noncytotoxic to osteoclasts and bone cells, appears to be more effective than pamidronate, etidronate, and calcitonin in the treatment of cancer-related hypercalcemia. Importantly, unlike bisphosphonates, gallium nitrate is effective in both parathyroid-related protein-mediated and non-parathyroid-related protein-mediated hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Treatment of cancer-related hypercalcemia: the role of gallium nitrate. 1277 55
Severe hypercalcemia is a life-threatening medical emergency. It is most commonly caused by malignant tumors, but can also be caused by primary hyperparathyroidism or less often by a dysregulated production of active vitamin D in granulomatous disorders. Symptoms include nausea,
vomiting
,
renal insufficiency
, severe dehydration, lethargy, confusion, and even coma. Severity of symptoms, calcium concentrations, and the overall status of the patient are important considerations in selecting appropriate therapy. Hydration to correct volume depletion is the cornerstone of acute therapy. Loop diuretics may be added to saline hydration after extracellular fluid volume has been replenished to enhance urinary calcium excretion and mitigate fluid overload from rehydration. Calcitonin and intravenous infusion of bisphosphonates reduce serum calcium levels by interfering with calcium release from the skeleton. Dialysis with a low or zero calcium dialysate is reserved for patients who are refractory to these measures. Corticosteroids are effective with hypercalcemia due to increased vitamin D levels and in multiple myeloma.
...
PMID:[Hypercalcemic crisis]. 1468 84
Among many viral hemorrhagic fevers, only hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) occurs in Croatia. HFRS is a natural focus zoonosis with sudden onset, characterized by high fever and other clinical symptoms,
renal insufficiency
and hemorrhages. In Croatia, HFRS is caused by two types of hantaviruses--Puumala (PUU) and Dobrava (DOB). The basic pathologic and patophysiologic disorder in HFRS is capillary damage (vasculitis). Incubation of HFRS has not been precisely determined, it is most frequently around two weeks. The disease onset is usually abrupt. At the beginning, general symptoms include high fever and myalgias, especially in the lumbar region, and abdominal pain, as well as strong headaches, malaise and nausea, and often
vomiting
or diarrhea. In half of the patients respiratory symptoms occur. Later on, some patients may experience hypotension, oliguria and other signs of renal failure, and apart from petechial, severe hemorrhages may also occur in other organs. During typical clinical presentation of the disease, some characteristic symptoms are clearly distinguished in particular stages of the disease. Therefore, the course of HFRS is usually divided into five distinct stages (febrile, hypotensive, oliguric, polyuric and convalescent). Such a course of the disease is more commonly present in case of DOB virus than PUU virus infection. The febrile stage with sudden onset usually lasts from 3 to 7 days, when thrombocytopenia and hemoconcentration, as well as albuminuria and hematuria are almost always recorded. The hypotensive stage lasts from one to 2 days on an average and is characterized by lower blood pressure and signs of renal failure. The oliguric stage usually starts at the beginning of the second week of the disease, when extensive hemorrhage may occur and urea and creatinine reach their highest values. The oliguric stage is followed by the polyuric stage which can last for up to two weeks, and is characterized by excretion of a large quantity of urine of low specific gravity (up to 15 liters during 24 hours). The convalescence (convalescent stage) is slower, may last for several weeks or months, but usually resolves without complications. During the infection caused by PUU virus, the course of disease is usually milder with only two stages. The first one is febrile, followed by the second stage with renal symptoms, and rare and mild hemorrhagic manifestations. This type of disease is mostly encountered during epidemics. The mortality in severe cases of the disease (DOB virus) is 5% to 10%, whereas in PUU virus infection it is less than 1%.
...
PMID:[Clinical picture of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Croatia]. 1501 67
A 4.5-year old, male African spur-thighed tortoise (Geochelone sulcata) was presented to the University of Florida Veterinary Teaching Hospital with a 2-week history of lethargy, anorexia, constipation, dyspnea, and coughing up fluid or
vomiting
. Laboratory results included an inflammatory leukogram and a marked increase in plasma uric acid concentration. Synovial fluid from multiple joints was thick, chalky white, and opaque, with a grainy consistency. Microscopically, the fluid contained numerous brown, needle-like crystals consistent with urates (gout). Gross necropsy findings and histopathology confirmed a diagnosis of systemic gout, with urate deposition, gout tophi, and underlying necrosis in multiple organs, including kidneys, lung, and liver. Dehydration with concurrent
renal insufficiency
may have impaired urate excretion and led to a build-up of urates in the blood and tissues of this tortoise. A high protein diet also may have contributed to the development of gout. Cytologic evaluation of synovial fluid can be used as a quick and definitive tool to diagnose gout in tortoises.
...
PMID:Synovial fluid from an African spur-thighed tortoise (Geochelone sulcata). 1504 27
We report five cases of
vomiting
associated with a very important increase of maternal plasma uric acid (> 595 mmol/l, 100 mg/l) at the third trimester of pregnancy. In all cases, elevation was transitory and regressive with rehydratation. Pregnancies proceeded normally to term and delivered healthy babies. An important rise of plasmatic uric acid during pregnancy can be found in severe hypertensive disorders (preeclampsia, HELLP syndrome, acute fatty liver). Nevertheless, it can be related to transient
renal insufficiency
without any severe pathology. In our five observations, digestive disorders seem to be the reason for this phenomenon and spontaneous prognosis was excellent in all cases.
...
PMID:[Important elevation of uric acid associated with vomiting at the third trimester of pregnancy: report of five cases with favorable outcome]. 1538 Jul 50
The efficacy of combination therapy with irinotecan and capecitabine has been demonstrated for the first-line treatment of metastatic colorectal cancer (MCRC). The aim of this trial was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of this combination in MCRC as second-line treatment after failure of 24-h infusional 5-fluorouracil (5-FU24h) and folinic acid (FA). Patients pre-treated with 5-FU24h/FA were recruited at two institutions to receive 6 x weekly irinotecan 70 mg/m2 and capecitabine (1000 mg/m2 b.i.d. days 1-14 and 22-35). Courses were repeated on day 50. In elderly patients (>65 years) a 20% dose reduction of both drugs was scheduled. Twenty-eight patients [M/F 20/8; median age 65 years (range 44-79); median ECOG score 1] were enrolled. The most frequent sites of metastases were liver, n=20, lymph nodes and lungs, n=10, respectively. Half of the patients had two or more metastatic sites. A total of 71 treatment courses (median 2, range 1-8) were administered. Main toxicities [worst per patient (%); CTC grade 1/2/3/4] were: anaemias 18/14/-/-; leukocytopenia 11/21/-/-; thrombocytopenia 11/-/-/-; diarrhea 18/36/21/-; nausea/
vomiting
43/29/4/-; mucositis 4/11/-/-; alopecia 7/25/-/-; hand-foot syndrome 7/21/-/-; fatigue 14/14/-/-;
renal insufficiency
(caused by diarrhea and exsiccosis) -/-/-/7. Dose intensity in the first course was [median/mean (%)]: irinotecan 92/83; capecitabine 88/82. Twenty-three patients are evaluable for response analysis (five did not complete the first course): three patients showed partial remissions (13%) and 11 patients had stable disease (48%). Median time to progression was 3.0 months for the total population (range 1.4-17.3) and 6.5 months for responders (partial response plus no change). Seventy-four percent of the patients received a third-line therapy. Overall survival was 15.7 months calculated from the start of study treatment. Second-line therapy with irinotecan and capecitabine yielded a tumor control in 61% of patients with MCRC. Efficacy and toxicity data are comparable to 5-FU/irinotecan combinations, although the likelihood of severe diarrhea appears to be higher with capecitabine/irinotecan.
...
PMID:Irinotecan and capecitabine as second-line treatment after failure for first-line infusional 24-h 5-fluorouracil/folinic acid in advanced colorectal cancer: a phase II study. 1561 2
Spontaneous rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm into a retroaortic left renal vein is an uncommon occurrence. A 55-year-old woman presented with shortness of breath,
vomiting
, and diffuse abdominal pain that had radiated to her back and legs for the preceding 10 days. A pulsatile abdominal mass, hematuria,
renal insufficiency
, and heart failure were present at the initial evaluation. Computed tomography showed an infrarenal abdominal aortic aneurysm that communicated with a retroaortic left renal vein. After urgent surgical repair, cardiac and renal function were dramatically improved. To the best of our knowledge, this is the 1st reported case of a woman with such a fistula. We review treatments reported in the literature.
...
PMID:Aorta-left renal vein fistula in a woman. 1574
We report the case of an 81-year old woman with stupor, confusion, somnolence,
vomiting
, and reduced food intake for 5 days. Laboratory investigations revealed low serum concentrations of sodium and potassium with a serum osmolality of 225 mOsm/kg H (2)O in the face of an inappropriately concentrated urine with an osmolality in the normal range, suggesting the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) in the absence of
renal insufficiency
, adrenal insufficiency, and hypothyroidism. Careful drug evaluation revealed amitriptyline and citalopram as possible inciters of antidiuretic hormone secretion. Subsequently, these drugs were withdrawn. Under continuous sodium substitution and fluid restriction serum sodium normalized and the patient's symptoms resolved. She was fully alert by day 15. We conclude that hyponatremia secondary to SIADH was the cause of the patient's neurologic symptoms. Clinicians should be aware of this possible side effect of central acting agents such as amitriptyline and citalopram, drugs that are often used to treat elderly patients suffering from depression or chronic pain.
...
PMID:Citalopram therapy as a risk factor for symptomatic hyponatremia caused by the syndrome of inappropriate secretion of antidiuretic hormone (SIADH): a case report. 1602 23
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