Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In an outbreak of winter vomiting disease affecting both pupils and staff in a primary school, virus-like particles were found in 7 out of 8 faecal specimens examined by electron microscopy. The particles measured 26 nm in diameter and had a buoyant density of 1-38--1-40 g/cm3 in caesium chloride. They could not be cultured in tissue-culture or organ-culture. In immune electron microscopy tests the particles appeared to differ antigenically from the Norwalk and Hawaii agents. Two out of three patients examined more than one month after their illness were still excreting the particles.
...
PMID:Virus-like particles in winter vomiting disease. 6 20

In a series of outbreaks of food-poisoning associated with the consumption of cockles, no bacterial pathogens were demonstrable either in faeces of patients or in cockles. However, small round virus-like particles have been detected in a high proportion of the faecal specimens in three of the outbreaks. These particles are similar in size, morphological features and density to particles seen in outbreaks of winter vomiting and non-bacterial gastroenteritis although in preliminary tests they are serologically distinctive.
...
PMID:A possible virus aetiology in outbreaks of food-poisoning from cockles. 6 73

15 patients with malignant lymphomas (stage III B or IV) who had become resistant to previous combination chemotherapy were treated with DTIC. The drug was administered intravenously as a single agent in doses of 300 mg/m2 on 5 consecutive days, once a month. The results demonstrate good responses in Hodgkin's disease, while in non-Hodgkin's lymphomas only incomplete and short remissions or failures were recorded. The only untoward side effects were nausea, vomiting and pain in the vein during the injection.
...
PMID:Imidazole carboxamide (DTIC) in the treatment of advanced lymphomas. Efficacy of DTIC in cases which fail to respond to conventional chemotherupetic combinations. 6 32

St Christophers' Hospice near London is now internationally known as a special centre for the care of terminally ill patients. In these cases, the relief of symptoms is paramount, and prominent among those symptoms is pain. Such pain can almost always be relieved without euphoria or lessening of consciousness. More than 60% of patients admitted to St Christopher's complain of pain, and the scheme of management outlined below results in substantial or complete relief of pain in all of them. Addiction does not occur when control of the patient's pain is part of the pattern of total care. The author considers management of pain of varying severity, together with associated symptoms such as vomiting, anorexia, dry mouth and hiccup, dyspnoea, cough, anxiety and depression, insomnia, constipation and diarrhoea.
...
PMID:Drug control of common symptoms in the terminally ill patient. 6 49

20 consecutive child admissions to a Calcutta, India, hospital with acute diarrhea and moderate to severe clinical dehydration were studied. They were treated with an oral sucrose/electrolyte solution, which achieved complete hydration in 19 out of the 20 cases; 1 child did not respond and needed intravenous therapy. Vomiting, abdominal distension, and appearance of sugar in the stools during oral therapy did not interfer with its success. A child was considered to have recovered when the body weight had stabilized and when there was no further diarrhea, a process requiring 5-6 days. In addition, recovery involved restoration of plasma-bicarbonate to normal levels, falls in the hematocrit values and in the plasma specific gravidity, and complete clinical recovery. Solutions of glucose/electrolytes have already been used in the treatment of acute diarrhea. Replacement of glucose with sucrose is preferable since it is less expensive and more readily available in developing areas. This study showed that replacement of the glucose with sucrose is as effective.
...
PMID:Evaluation of a sucrose/electrolyte solution for oral rehydration in acute infantile diarrhoea. 6 56

Thirty-nine infants suspected of having cow's milk protein intolerance (C.M.P.I.) were investigated, and jejunal biopsies were performed before and after challenge with cow's milk. Thirty patients had significant jejunal mucosal damage after milk challenge, but symptoms of diarrhoea and vomiting developed in only twenty-two. The patients with symptoms were subsequently managed on a diet free from cow's milk until tolerance developed. However, the eight infants without symptoms (but with jejunal mucosal damage) made satisfactory clinical progress, with adequate weight-gain, on a diet of cow's milk. Repeat jejunal biopsy specimens from two of these patients showed that there had been a definite improvement since the immediate post-challenge biopsy specimens were taken. Most patients with C.M.P.I. who need to be treated with a diet from which cow's milk has been eliminated may be detected by clinical means alone, and the remainder may continue on a cow's milk diet unless or until symptoms develop. There seems to be no clinical justification for routine jejunal biopsy in infants in whom C.M.P.I. is suspected.
...
PMID:Is jejunal biopsy really necessary in cow's milk protein intolerance? 7 22

48 patients admitted to a rural Bangladesh hospital with dehydration secondary to diarrhea were examined for infection caused by (R.L.A.) reovirus-like agent or (E.T.E.C.) enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli. The diagnosis of R.L.A. infection was established by electron microscopy of stool filtrates and by a 4-fold or greater rise in serum complement-fixing antibodies to the Nebraska calf diarrhea virus. Evidence of infection by heat-labile-toxin producing E.T.E.C. was sought by stool culture and serological testing using the adrenal cell tissue-culture system. Infection by heat-stable-toxin producing E.T.E.C. was sought by stool culture using the infant mouse test. 12 patients, all less than 2 years old, had evidence of R.L.A. infection, accounting for illness in 5% of the 22 patients under 2. None of these 22 had evidence of E.E.T.E.C. infection. R.L.A. diarrhea lasted 5-6 days, often led to serious dehydration, and was associated with vomiting and fever. 11 cases of E.T.E.C. diarrhea were detected, accounting for 56% of the cases of diarrhea in the 18 patients who were more than 10 years old. Diarrhea caused by E.T.E.C. was sudden in onset, shorter in duration, and caused pronounced dehydration. In a community survey, E.T.E.C. was isolated with equal frequency in the stools of control and case family members. Data suggest that E.T.E.C. is a common cause of adult diarrhea in Bangladesh while R.L.A. is a common cause of diarrhea in children.
...
PMID:Enterotoxigenic Escherichia coli and Reovirus-like agent in rural Bangladesh. 7 38

Twelve patients with severe ventricular dysrhythmias were treated by one single dose of 250 mg of mexiletine injected intravenously over a 15 min. period. All patients showed some antiarrhythmic response. In 9 cases, the ventricular premature beats were totally or almost totally abolished up to 20 to 100 min. after the end of the infection. In most patients (5/7), there existed a correlation between the plasma concentration of the drug and the antiarrhymic action. However, the drug levels were not different in the good responders as compared to the poor responders or in those who manifested a prolonged antiarrhythmic activity as compared to the others. Side-effect appeared in three cases and consisted of vomiting, tremor, and episodes of sinus arrest.
...
PMID:The efficacy of intravenous mexiletine on ventricular ectopic activity. 7 54

Cow's milk allergy was diagnosed in 79 patients, all of whom had signs and symptoms of allergies other than milk intolerance. In addition to difficulties with infant feeding and diarrhoea, clinical features included constipation, vomiting, intestinal colic, growth retardation, and psychological disturbance, as well as eczema and asthma. All were reversible after milk withdrawal, which suggests that the allergic basis of such symptoms may have been underestimated. In most cases, one or both parents were atopic and the child had been bottle-fed from birth. There were no breast-fed children of non-atopic parents in this series.
...
PMID:Common manifestations of cow's milk allergy in children. 7 38

The efficacy of flufenamic acid (3 times/day in 200 mg doses) was tested in a double-blind crossover study, using 44 primary dysmenorrheic patients. After 3 months of use, flufenamic relieved symptoms in most patients. Associated gastrointestinal symptoms were relieved in 66% and 52% (for vomiting and diarrhea, respectively), and 28% of patients experienced cessation of pain symptoms. 4 cases of drug-induced side effects were reported: dizziness and mild dyspepsia.
...
PMID:Flufenamic acid in treatment of primary spasmodic dysmenorrhoea. A double-blind crossover study. 7 92


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>