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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. The authors review the literature describing acute symptomatology produced by the gradual or abrupt withdrawal of heterocyclic antidepressants, monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOI) and neuroleptics. 2. Withdrawal of heterocyclic antidepressants and antipsychotic agents causes similar symptomatology. Symptoms produced by the discontinuation of these drugs include nausea, emesis, anorexia, diarrhea, rhinorrhea, diaphoresis, myalgias, paresthesias, anxiety, agitation, restlessness, and insomnia. 3. Psychotic relapse is often presaged by anxiety, agitation, restlessness, and insomnia. Prodromal symptoms are distinguished from the effects of neuroleptic withdrawal by a temporal relationship of the latter to reductions in the dosage or discontinuation of antipsychotic agents. 4. Withdrawal of MAOIs can result in severe anxiety, agitation, pressured speech, sleeplessness or drowsiness, hallucinations, delirium, and paranoid psychosis. 5. MAOI withdrawal phenomena resemble the symptoms produced by the discontinuation of chronically administered psychostimulants. 6. The capacity of MAOIs to exert amphetamine-like effects presynaptically and the propensity of somatic treatments for depression to subsensitize presynaptic receptors regulating the release of catecholamines provide a basis for the development of psychotic symptoms upon the withdrawal of MAOI. Evidence for this hypothesis is reviewed.
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PMID:Heterocyclic antidepressant, monoamine oxidase inhibitor and neuroleptic withdrawal phenomena. 196 71

We report two cases of fulminant hepatitis which might be due to toloxatone, a new type-A monoamine oxidase inhibitor. Hepatitis occurred 20 days after the beginning of toloxatone administration in the first case and 138 days after the reintroduction of treatment in the second case. Clinical features included vomiting and jaundice, followed by asterixis and coma. Histologically, hepatic cell necrosis was predominant in the centrilobular area in the first case, and affected the entire lobule in the second case. Both patients died despite emergency liver transplantation.
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PMID:[Fatal fulminant hepatitis in 2 women taking toloxatone (Humoryl)]. 236 78

As most diet therapy texts provide little information about psychiatric illnesses and their treatment, this article is intended as a brief introduction for dietitians. Several psychiatric illnesses, including schizophrenia, mood disorders, eating disorders, and substance abuse, may adversely affect food intake and nutritional status. The drugs used to treat those disorders similarly have effects on appetite and gastrointestinal function and interact with food and nutrients. Antipsychotics, antidepressants, and monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) cause dry mouth, constipation, and weight gain. Lithium may cause nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, polydipsia, and weight gain. MAOIs have well-known interactions with foods containing tyramine. Lithium interacts with dietary sodium and caffeine; decreasing dietary intakes of those substances may produce lithium toxicity. Despite claims to the contrary, major psychiatric illnesses cannot be cured by nutritional therapies alone. Dietitians can, however, play an important role as part of a multidisciplinary team in the treatment of patients with psychiatric illness. Such a role includes nutrition assessment and monitoring, nutrition interventions, patient and staff education, and some forms of psychotherapy, including supportive and behavioral therapies for patients with eating disorders.
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PMID:Nutritional aspects of psychiatric disorders. 267 98

Eighteen women completed a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover study designed to investigate the effects of isocarboxazid in the treatment of bulimia nervosa. There was a significant reduction in binge eating and vomiting during isocarboxazid treatment. Response was not influenced by either the presence or absence of current major depression or personality disorder. There were no serious adverse effects from this monoamine oxidase inhibitor therapy, although over 50% of patients elected to discontinue isocarboxazid 1 year after the study.
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PMID:A trial of isocarboxazid in the treatment of bulimia nervosa. 306 79

1. Various antidepressant drugs and procedures have been studied against reserpine-induced emesis in pigeons.2. Electroconvulsions, pentylenetetrazol and a non-hydrazide monoamine oxidase inhibitor (pargyline) block reserpine emesis.3. It is suggested that reserpine-induced emesis in pigeons provides a simple and reliable method for studying anti-reserpine activity, and the compounds effective in antagonizing this emetic response are likely to have antidepressant property.
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PMID:Antagonism of reserpine-induced emesis in pigeons: a screening method for antidepressant activity. 568 84

The pharmacology, side effects, and possible drug interactions of metrizamide, a water-solulbe contrast medium for myelography, are reviewed. Metrizamide concentration in the brain reaches maximal levels two to six hour after lumbar injection, depending on dose and patient positioning, and is largely (55-96%) excreted from the body after 24 hours. Its lower neurotoxicity, compared with other water-soluble contrast agents, can be attributed in part to its undissociated, non-ionic nature. Common side effects, which include headache, nausea, and vomiting, occur to the same degree as with other myelographic contrast media. Reported data suggest that convulsions, which have occurred in a very small percentage of patients, are related to the amount of contrast medium reaching the brain which, in turn, is largely a factor of dose and examination technique. Although the risk of seizures is small, it is recommended that drugs that lower the seizure threshold (phenothiazine derivatives, butyrophenones, tricyclic antidepressants, and MAO-inhibitors) should be avoided 48 hours before metrizamide administration (if possible), should not be used to control nausea, and should not be resumed for 24 to 48 hours after the myelographic procedure. The value of premedication (e.g., with diazepam) to prevent seizures has not been established and is not recommended.
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PMID:Metrizamide: a review with emphasis on drug interactions. 610 72

The pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, therapeutic and diagnostic uses, toxicity, adverse reactions, and contraindications of metoclopramide are reviewed. Metoclopramide enhances the rate of gastric emptying by (1) augmenting esophageal peristalsis, gastric antral contractions, and small intestine transit time and (2) increasing resting pressures of the lower esophageal and pyloric sphincters. The drug does not stimulate gastric acid secretions. The injectable form is approved for use to facilitate intubation of the small intestine and the passage of barium into the intestine for radiographic procedures. Tablets are approved for the treatment of symptoms associated with diabetic gastroparesis. The drug has been used in the treatment of vomiting of various etiologies. The side effects of metoclopramide are usually mild, transient, and reversible with discontinuation of the drug. They include drowsiness, GI disturbances, extrapyramidal reactions, and increased lactation. Metoclopramide should not be given in combination with MAO inhibitors, tricyclic antidepressants, sympathomimetic amines, or to patients with pheochromocytoma, GI hemorrhage, obstruction, or perforation. Metoclopramide appears to be an effective drug in stimulating the mobility of the upper gastrointestinal tract without increasing gastric secretions. Further studies are needed to assess its value in the treatment of vomiting secondary to anesthesia and chemotherapy, and to assess its precise role in the treatment of diabetic gastroparesis.
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PMID:Review of a new gastrointestinal drug--metoclopramide. 701 32

Application of the common marmoset to pharmacological studies was reviewed, especially employment of the animal as a model of Parkinson's disease were presented. The common marmoset is one of the New World monkeys with a body weight of 300-350 g. It is small enough to be easily handled and to be kept as a group in a room. In the fields of pharmacology, it has been used in studies of plasma renin activity inhibitors, lipoprotein, memory/learning, obstetrics, transplantation, toxicology, anxiolytic agents and virology/immunology. We showed that the common marmoset was a useful animal for studies on Parkinson's disease, dopamine metabolism by microdialysis and nausea/vomiting. The common marmoset was sensitive to 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,3,6-tetrahydropyridine (MPTP) and developed permanent parkinsonism after MPTP injection. MPTP-treated common marmosets showed tremor and akinesia, and it remarkably responded to antiparkinsonian agents. A dopamine D1 agonist, which caused stereotyped behavior in rats, did not reverse parkinsonism in humans. We showed this agent did not have any antiparkinsonian effects on MPTP-treated common marmosets. MAO has subtypes, A and B, that have differences of distribution in different species. MAO type B inhibitors were applied for the treatment of Parkinson's disease. MAO subtype B inhibitors do not cause any change in behavior or extracellular concentration of dopamine or its metabolites in rodents. In MPTP-treated common marmosets, however, administration of a MAO type B inhibitor increased the antiparkinsonian effects of levodopa and decreased dopamine metabolites. The common marmoset is a suitable animal for the study of MAO type B inhibitors.
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PMID:[Application of the common marmoset to pharmacological studies]. 759 May 19

The withdrawal of heterocyclic antidepressants and antipsychotic agents can produce nausea, emesis, anorexia, diarrhoea, rhinorrhoea, diaphoresis, myalgias, paraesthesias, anxiety, agitation, restlessness and insomnia. The withdrawal of monoamine oxidase (MAO) inhibitors may result in severe anxiety, agitation, pressured speech, sleeplessness or drowsiness, hallucinations, cognitive impairment, delirium, suicidality and delusions of persecution. The withdrawal of antipsychotic agents may give rise to symptoms preceding the onset of psychosis. These potential harbingers of relapse include anxiety, agitation, restlessness and insomnia. The withdrawal phenomena reviewed are usually prevented by gradually reducing the total daily dosage of the pertinent drug. Antimuscarinic agents often alleviate the distress produced by the withdrawal of tricyclic antidepressants and antipsychotic agents. MAO inhibitor withdrawal syndromes may constitute medical emergencies. The prevention of the evolution of a MAO inhibitor withdrawal-precipitated syndrome is a high priority.
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PMID:Withdrawal phenomena associated with antidepressant and antipsychotic agents. 791 78

Pharmacologic and cognitive behavioral therapies have been advocated in the treatment of bulimia nervosa (BN). Brofaromine, a selective and reversible inhibitor of monoamine oxidase-A was selected for a double-blind, placebo-controlled evaluation because of previous demonstrated monoamine oxidase inhibitor efficacy in BN and because of its safer adverse reaction profile. Thirty-six female patients who met DSM-III-R criteria for BN were randomly assigned to the drug group (N = 19) or to the placebo group (N = 17) for an 8-week outpatient trial. Brofaromine produced a significant effect in decreasing episodes of vomiting throughout the trial, although comparable reductions in episodes of binge eating were found in both groups. Also, there were no advantages of drug over placebo on improvements in attitudinal measures and shape or on self-report ratings of depression and anxiety. However, a significant proportion of the subjects on brofaromine lost weight when compared with the placebo group. Methodologic issues including subjective assessment measures, placebo response rates, and the elucidation of responder subgroups are discussed.
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PMID:Is there a role for selective monoamine oxidase inhibitor therapy in bulimia nervosa? A placebo-controlled trial of brofaromine. 812 Jan 55


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