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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Hyperprolactinemia can successfully be treated by dopaminagonists such as bromocriptin or lisuride. About 10% of patients complain about side effects like orthostatic hypotension, nausea or
vomiting
, which may lead to discontinuation of treatment. We therefore conducted a study using terguride--a new dopaminagonist--in 5 patients with hyperprolactinemia and intolerable side effects under conventional treatment.
Terguride
is the transdihydroderivative of lisuride (Dopergin). We treated 5 patients, 2 men with macroprolactinoma and 3 women with microprolactinoma with terguride. The mean duration of treatment was 15.6 months (7-37 months). Patients were treated with up to 5 mg terguride daily. All 5 patients had a marked initial decrease of elevated prolactin levels 8 h after administration of 0.25 mg terguride orally. Three patients became normoprolactinemic after sufficient increase of the dose of terguride, 2 female patients with a microprolactinoma got eumenorrhoeic thereafter. The treatment with terguride was tolerated without side effects by all patients. There were no significant changes of the examined parameters of clinical chemistry nor the other pituitary hormones. Results of cranial computertomography did not change in 4 patients, one patient had tumor progression. Tergurid as a dopaminagonist is an effective inhibitor of prolactin with little side effects and thus a useful drug in the treatment of hyperprolactinemia.
...
PMID:[Terguride in hyperprolactinemia--experiences with 5 patients]. 218 44
Terguride
is an ergoline derivative with mixed agonistic/antagonistic dopaminergic activity. This led to a paradoxical suggestion that it is effective in the treatment of both schizophrenia and parkinsonism. A total of 65 in- or outpatients with parkinsonism mostly of vascular or idiopathic etiology were included in a 4-week, open, multicenter trial.
Terguride
was administered under an increasing dose schedule which was leveled off according to the clinical response. Mostly because of nausea,
vomiting
, and lack of improvement 25% of inpatients and 61% of outpatients were removed from the study. The average daily dose at the end of the trial was 4.2 mg, ranging from 1.0 to 5.5 mg. The average Simpson and Angus scale total score and performance in the Spiral Drawing Task improved significantly during the trial by 20% and 38% respectively. The following adverse effects were noted most frequently throughout the study (including those who withdrew): constipation (occurred in 42% of all ratings performed during the trial) drowsiness and nausea (16% each). Adverse circulatory effects were negligible. Psychotic symptoms, including depression, confusion, hallucinations, and paranoid syndrome, each occurred in 1 patient, i.e., at a lower rate than with other dopaminergic drugs. Scotopic electroretinograms in a subsample of 7 patients showed a significant transitory decrease in the B-wave amplitude at the end of the 1st week and a subsequent return to pretreatment values.
...
PMID:Terguride in parkinsonism. A multicenter trial. 304 1
Terguride
, an analogue of lisuride, decreased locomotor activity, produced cataplexy, and blocked apomorphine-induced stereotypic behavior. It did not induce stereotypies in rodents or
emesis
in dogs. However, in rats with unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine lesions of the substantia nigra, terguride produced contralateral rotation.
Terguride
bound to D-2 striatal dopamine receptors.
Terguride
has both agonist and antagonist actions at striatal dopamine receptors, but chronic administration did not produce behavioral supersensitivity. These pharmacologic properties differ from those of other antiparkinsonian agents; terguride may be effective for the chronic treatment of Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Terguride, a mixed dopamine agonist-antagonist, in animal models of Parkinson's disease. 356 89
Terguride
, a derivative of the ergot alkaloid, was characterized as a new anti-hyperprolactinemic agent in rats and dogs in comparison with bromocriptine.
Terguride
was found to bind selectively to the pituitary dopamine D2-receptors with a high affinity (Kd = 0.39 nM). In reserpinized rats, terguride at 0.03 mg/kg, p.o. significantly reduced the serum prolactin (PRL) level. The PRL lowering effect and the effective dose were longer lasting and about 30 times lower than those of bromocriptine, respectively. In rats bearing estrogen-induced pituitary prolactinoma, chronic terguride induced shrinkage of the prolactinoma as well as reduction of the high serum PRL level. In lactating rats, terguride (1.0 mg/kg, s.c.) reduced milk production in the mammary gland, whereas bromocriptine showed no significant effect up to 10 mg/kg, s.c.
Terguride
(10 mg/kg, p.o.) did not induce any stereotypy and hypermotility in reserpinized rats, while bromocriptine induced both stereotypy and hypermotility significantly at 10 mg/kg, p.o. In dogs, terguride, like bromocriptine, reduced the serum PRL level, but did not affect the serum levels of growth hormone and luteinizing hormone. In dogs, bromocriptine induced both
emesis
and PRL-lowering at almost the same dose, whereas
emesis
-inducing doses of terguride were about 100 times higher than the PRL-lowering dose. These results suggest that terguride as a dopamine D2-agonist is a potent inhibitor of PRL secretion with less neurotropic side effects compared to bromocriptine, and thus a useful drug for the treatment of galactorrhea and hyperprolactinemia including prolactinoma.
...
PMID:Terguride as a new anti-hyperprolactinemic agent: characterization in rats and dogs in comparison with bromocriptine. 790 16