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

The toxicity and hematologic effects of Escherichia coli-derived recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (rhGM-CSF) were studied in 58 treatment cycles in Japanese patients with advanced malignancy as a phase I/II clinical trial. rhGM-CSF in doses from 30 to 250 micrograms/m2/day was administered by 24-hour continuous intravenous infusion, 8-hour intravenous, or a daily subcutaneous injection for 14 days. The most common adverse drug events (ADE) were fever, nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, skin eruption, and phlebitis. The frequency of moderate and severe ADE was 2.9, 14.7, 35.3 and 47.1% at 30, 60, 125, 250 micrograms/m2/day, respectively. In terms of administration routes, the frequency of ADE was 69% with 24-hour continuous intravenous infusion, 39.1% with 8-hour intravenous infusion and 16.7% with subcutaneous injection. Regarding the hematologic effects of rhGM-CSF, leukopenia improved in a dose-dependent manner. The appropriate dose level to be used in the phase II study was estimated to be in the range between 60 and 250 micrograms/m2/day.
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PMID:Phase I/II study of recombinant human granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor in patients with advanced malignancy. The Multicenter Study Group. 158 68

Acivicin (AT-125) is a glutamine antagonist with dose-limiting, schedule-dependent CNS toxicity and predictable CSF penetration after intravenous administration. Because of these properties, a trial in CNS malignancies was initiated. Thirty-two patients with recurrent or residual malignant astrocytomas were treated with AT-125. The majority of patients had glioblastoma multiforme (24) and had received prior nitrosoureas (21). The median age was 50 years, and Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) performance status was 2. The major determinant of response was based upon radiologic criteria using computed tomographic (CT) scanning and/or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. The tumor mass was measured in two perpendicular planes, which yielded the largest cross-sectional area. Standard solid tumor criteria for response were used. All responding patients also had a stable or tapered dose of corticosteroids with stable or improved performance status and neurologic examination. There were four objective responses (12%): one complete remission (3 1/2+ years) and three partial remissions (57, 86, and 322 days). Two patients had improvement in disease that did not meet requirements for a partial remission. Toxicity was mild and primarily consisted of nausea, vomiting, and lethargy. Two patients were removed from study due to neurotoxicity (depression and hallucinations). The strict response criteria used in this trial were not those that have been used in testing other active agents such as carmustine (BCNU). We conclude that AT-125 has objective antitumor activity in malignant astrocytomas and warrants further study.
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PMID:Objective antitumor activity of acivicin in patients with recurrent CNS malignancies: a Southwest Oncology Group trial. 164 69

Fourteen new cases of cytochrome oxidase (COX)-associated Leigh syndrome (LS) are combined with 20 reported cases to describe the clinical, laboratory, and radiological features of this devastating metabolic condition. Three clinical stages are identified. Most patients have normal neurological development during the first 8-12 months (stage I). Somatic complaints are common, including chronic diarrhea, recurrent vomiting, anorexia, and decelerating body and head growth. The second stage evolves during late infancy and early childhood when motor regression becomes evident. Eye signs, altered breathing patterns, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, and cerebellar signs emerge and sudden clinical deterioration occurs during intercurrent infectious or metabolic stress. The last stage may extend from 2 to 10 years and is manifested by extreme hypotonia, swallowing difficulties and undernutrition. Feeding assistance is necessary and seizures may occur. The CSF lactate concentration is consistently elevated and MRI abnormalities are seen in the subcortical structures. COX deficiency affects most tissues, but is not always generalized. For example, 3 patients with a cardiomyopathy had normal COX activity in cultured skin fibroblasts. Nearly normal amounts of cross-reacting material are present by ELISA and immunoblot analyses. Parental consanguinity has been found in several families, the hereditary pattern is recessive and males are affected more commonly (2:1). The biomolecular abnormality causing COX deficiency in LS is unknown, but the available evidence implicates a nuclear-encoded protein that affects the structure or the stability of the holoenzyme complex.
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PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase-associated Leigh syndrome: phenotypic features and pathogenetic speculations. 165 84

A 2.5-year retrospective study of pyogenic meningitis in hospitalized children in Kelantan was carried out with regard to aetiology, clinical features, investigation, treatment and outcome. There were 58 children with 43 cases (74.1%) occurring below the age of 1 year. Frequent presenting symptoms included fever (98.3%), fits (77.6%), anorexia (39.7%), vomiting (34.5%) and drowsiness (12.1%). On admission, 37 (63.7%) had neck stiffness, 10 (17.2%) had Kernig's sign and 32 (55.2%) had coma. CSF cultures were positive for Haemophilus influenzae in 29 (50%), Streptococcus pneumonia in 13 (22.4%) and Neisseria meningitidis in 3 (5.2%). The antibiotic sensitivity profiles showed that the three main organisms were 100% sensitive to Chloramphenicol, Streptococcus pneumoniae was 100% sensitive to penicillin, Neisseria meningitidis was 100% sensitive to penicillin and ampicillin, and Haemophilus influenzae was 90% sensitive to penicillin and ampicillin. The total hospital mortality was 18.9%. All but two of the eleven deaths occurred in children younger than 1 year. Nineteen of the 35 (54.3%) survivors attended for at least one follow-up after discharge from hospital. Of these 19 children, 47.4% had neurological sequelae.
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PMID:Pyogenic meningitis in hospitalized children in Kelantan, Malaysia. 169 51

Many chemotherapeutic agents have been evaluated during the last 40 years and some have now an established place in the management of malignant disease. However these agents have a level of toxicity well above any other group of drugs. Chemotherapeutic agents do not discriminate between normal and neoplastic tissue. Chemotherapeutic regimens that are toxic to rapidly dividing malignant cells, are liable to be particularly harmful to lymphoid tissues, bone marrow and the epithelium of the gastrointestinal tract. The side effects due to chemotherapy are classified as immediate, early, delayed and late. Immediate side effects are those that may occur within the first 24 hours of treatment. The most common immediate side effect is nausea and vomiting, due to direct central effect on the vomiting center of the brain. Cisplatin and nitrogen mustard are particularly prone to this complication. The antiemetics usually used are metoclopramide, domperidone and steroid. The efficacies of these drugs are not so good for nausea and vomiting due to cisplatin administration, however several blockades against serotonin M-receptor recently developed are quite effective to nausea and vomiting of chemotherapeutic regimens including cisplatin. Early side effects commence within about one month of therapy. The most common is bone marrow toxicity and can occur after therapy with the vast majority of anticancer drugs. The relative importance of leukopenia and thrombocytopenia vary between the drugs and their route of administration. Recently, hematopoietic cytokines, such as granulocyte-colony stimulating factor (G-CSF) and granulocyte-macrophage-colony stimulating factor (GM-CSP) have been introduced to granulocytopenia developed by cancer chemotherapy. In the phase II study of G-CSF, a rapid recovery of granulocytes after chemotherapy and marked efficacy on infection in granulocytopenic patients were observed. In addition to this, autologous bone marrow transplantation after chemotherapy has been described in patients with solid tumors.
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PMID:[Palliative therapy in cancer. 5. Side effects by anticancer drugs and their treatments]. 169 55

Cases of penicillin-resistant pneumococcal meningitis have been reported in other countries since 1977, but never before reported in Taiwan. In 1990, two cases of the disease were diagnosed here. Case one was a two-year-old boy who had had fever and vomiting for several days prior to admission. Under the impression of meningitis, a spinal tap was done. The CSF yielded pneumococcus, which was misinterpreted as sensitive to penicillin. Penicillin (400,000 units/kg/day) was given parenterally without effect. On the 12th day after admission, another spinal tap still yielded pneumococcus. This time the sensitivity test was reread with great care, and then reported to be penicillin-resistant pneumococcus. Minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) of penicillin was performed simultaneously and it revealed 0.1 microgram/ml. Vancomycin (60 mg/kg/day) was substituted for penicillin. The patient became afebrile two days later, and was discharged ten days later without sequelae. Case two, a five-month-old girl, was diagnosed to have meningitis because of fever, vomiting, tense fontanel and seizure on admission. After a spinal tap was done, she was put on ampicillin and cefotaxime. The fever subsided two days later. At that time, the CSF was reported to grow pneumococcus, again misread as sensitive to penicillin. The antibiotics was switched to penicillin, but fever recurred. The second spinal tap still yielded pneumococcus which was sensitive to penicillin but resitstant to oxacillin. Based on experience with the first case, penicillin was changed to vancomycin, and performed MIC immediately. The MIC was 1.0 microgram/ml. The patient became afebrile two days later, and was discharged in good condition after ten days of treatment.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Penicillin-resistant pneumococcal meningitis: report of two cases]. 177 62

About 30% of lumbar punctures are complicated by the lumbar puncture syndrome the main symptom of which is a characteristically posture-dependent headache (the so-called "spinal headache"), sometimes accompanied by nausea, vomiting and stiff neck. The syndrome usually begins in the days which follow lumbar puncture and subsides within 10 days. The most common pathogenetic theory is that perforation of the dura mater results in CSF leakage responsible for a fall in intrathecal pressure. Treatment of the lumbar puncture syndrome consists of rest in supine position and copious hydration, usually by the oral route. The epidural blood patch technique is seldom used. Prevention relies entirely on the use of small calibre lumbar puncture needles; keeping the patient lying supine after the puncture is a classical recommendation, but its preventive value has not yet been fully demonstrated.
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PMID:[Lumbar post-puncture syndrome]. 179 33

Headaches, vomiting and altered sensorium can be seen in patients with migraines as well as in patients with shunt malfunctions. This is a report of 10 patients with hydrocephalus and CSF shunts who presented with headache, vomiting, varying degrees of impairment of consciousness, and coma. Various diagnostic considerations were made: shunt malfunction, slit ventricle syndrome and low pressure (overshunting). Repeated operative procedures were performed in all. 7 of 10 patients had a family history of migraines when the diagnosis of migraine was entertained, 8 patients improved on propranolol therapy, 1 failed with this therapy but responded to verapamil. In the remaining 2 patients, after a transient response to propranolol, compartmentalized hydrocephalus became obvious and improvement followed with shunt procedures. It is concluded that in those patients with hydrocephalus and small ventricles on neuroimaging and a family history of migraines, and in the face of documented adequate shunt function, the diagnosis of migraines be entertained before further operative interventions.
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PMID:Clinical course and diagnosis of migraine headaches in hydrocephalic children. 184 Aug 19

We report a 14-year-old boy with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes (MELAS) who presented repeated episodes of abdominal pain and vomiting since the age of 8 years. In addition, he developed strokelike episodes with myoclonic seizures and transient hemiplegia on three occasions. At the age of 14-1/12-years, he also developed epilepsia partialis continua persisting for 10 days, which was associated with myoclonic seizures synchronized with spike discharges at the right central area. Laboratory examination disclosed increased levels of lactate and pyruvate in serum and CSF and low density areas in the bilateral temporal regions on CT scan. Muscle biopsy showed scattered ragged-red fibers. The enzyme activities (pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, pyruvate carboxylase, phosphoenol pyruvate carboxykinase, and cytochrome c oxidase) and the rates of decarboxylation of [3-14C]pyruvate in cultured skin fibroblasts were within normal ranges.
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PMID:[A case with MELAS associated with epilepsia partialis continua]. 189 96

Mumps virus is one of the most common causes of viral meningitis. Although brain involvement has been observed in a low proportion of children with mumps meningitis, a pure form of mumps encephalitis is extremely uncommon in the adult. A 23 year-old man presented with a rapidly evolving syndrome of cephalalgia , vomiting, mutism, disorders of gait, somnolence and dystonic movements. The electroencephalogram showed a diffusely slowed background activity. The CSF contained no cells, but the total protein concentration was elevated. The patient recovered without sequelae, but severe intellectual and motor disturbances persisted during more than a month. Serological studies showed an increase of blood IgM mumps-specific antibodies. We conclude that mumps encephalitis, although infrequent, should be considered among viral diseases that mimic herpes simplex encephalitis in the adulthood.
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PMID:[Mumps encephalitis in adulthood]. 205


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