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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The organic phosphorous compounds (OPC) include both the military grade nerve agents and the organic phosphorous pesticides. The major mechanism of OPC toxicity is through inhibition of
acetylcholinesterase
in neuronal synapses leading to excess acetylcholine and overstimulation of target organs. Signs and symptoms depend on the affinity of the OPC for muscarinic versus nicotinic receptors, and are likely to include both. Muscarinic symptoms may include diarrhea, urination, bronchospasm, bronchorrhea,
emesis
, and salivation. Nicotinic symptoms such as paralysis and fasciculations may also occur. Central nervous system toxicity may include seizures, altered mental status, and apnea, and require prompt intervention. Treatment includes early airway and ventilatory support as well as antidotal therapy with atropine, pralidoxime, and diazepam. Goals of therapy include prevention and rapid treatment of hypoxia and seizures, as these are linked to patient outcome.
...
PMID:Organic phosphorus compounds--nerve agents. 1616 8
The prophylactic efficacy of a combinational patch system containing physostigmine and procyclidine against soman intoxication was evaluated using dogs. Female beagle dogs (body weights 9-10 kg) were shaved on the abdominal side, attached with a matrix-type patch (7x7 cm) containing 1.5% of physostigmine plus 6% procyclidine for 2 days, and challenged with subcutaneous injection of serial doses (2-10 LD50) of soman. Separately, in combination with the patch attachment, atropine (2 mg/dog) plus 2-pralidoxime (600 mg/dog) or atropine plus 1-[([4-(aminocarbonyl)pyridinio]methoxy)methyl]-2-[(hydroxyimino)methyl]pyridinium (HI-6, 500 mg/dog) were injected intramuscularly 1 min after soman poisoning. The LD50 value of soman was determined to be 9.1 microg/kg, and high doses (> or = 1.4 LD50) of soman induced salivation,
emesis
, defecation and diarrhea, tremors and seizures, and recumbency of dogs, leading to 100% mortality in 24 h. The prophylactic patch, which led to mean 18.5-18.8% inhibition of blood
cholinesterase
activity by physostigmine and mean 7.9-8.3 ng/ml of blood concentration of procyclidine, exerted a high protection ratio (4.7 LD50), in comparison with relatively-low effects of traditional antidotes, atropine plus 2-pralidoxime (2.5 LD50) and atropine plus HI-6 (2.7 LD50). Noteworthy, a synergistic increase in the protection ratio was achieved by the combination of the patch with atropine plus HI-6 (9 LD50), but not with atropine plus 2-pralidoxime (5 LD50). In addition, the patch system markedly attenuated the cholinergic signs and seizures induced by soman, especially when combined with atropine plus HI-6, leading to elimination of brain injuries and physical incapacitation up to 6 LD50 of soman poisoning. Taken together, it is suggested that the patch system containing physostigmine and procyclidine, especially in combination with atropine and HI-6, could be a choice for the quality survival from nerve-agent poisoning.
...
PMID:Protection by a transdermal patch containing physostigmine and procyclidine of soman poisoning in dogs. 1625 78
Four siblings presented with
vomiting
, diarrhea and miosis following ingestion of the plant. This is the first report of miosis as a presenting sign of Jatropha intoxication. The combination of
vomiting
, diarrhea and miosis resembles the clinical presentation of organophosphate poisoning. This fact warrants the consideration of Jatropha ingestion in the differential diagnosis of organophosphate ingestion. Treatment of Jatropha intoxication is supportive with emphasis on rehydration. Measurement of plasma
acetylcholinesterase
activity levels, which is normal after Jatropha ingestion and decreased following organophosphate poisoning, may help differentiate between the two.
...
PMID:A case of Jatropha multifida poisoning resembling organophosphate intoxication. 1674 56
Non-ulcer dyspepsia is a common clinical disorder characterised by reduced gastric motility. Safety concerns have restricted use of currently available prokinetic drugs. Itopride is a new safer prokinetic drug with dopamine D2 antagonism and
acetylcholinesterase
inhibitory actions. The ENGIP-II study was conducted to investigate the efficacy, and safety of itopride in patients of non-ulcer dyspepsia. There were significant reductions in upper abdominal pain, heartburn frequency, gastro-oesophageal regurgitation, nausea, bloating, early satiety after meals at day 3 only; whereas significant improvements were noted in belching, anorexia at day 6 and in
vomiting
at day 9. Thus, ENGIP-II study shows that itopride was well tolerated patients and appears to be the drug of choice in patients with non-ulcer dyspepsia.
...
PMID:Evaluation of new gastro-intestinal prokinetic (ENGIP-II) study. 1682 70
A 45-year-old-man presented with severe
vomiting
, constipation, abdominal distention and bilateral ocular abductor palsy. Evaluation revealed diffuse autonomic dysfunction characterized by intestinal pseudo-obstruction, xerophthalmia, xerostomia, postural hypotension, erectile dysfunction and loss of sinus arrhythmia. Paraneoplastic work-up revealed thymoma. Most symptoms resolved after surgical removal of the thymoma. Six weeks later he developed worsening of external ophthalmoparesis with ptosis, responding to
acetylcholinesterase
inhibitor, confirming myasthenia gravis.
...
PMID:Intestinal pseudo-obstruction as initial presentation of thymoma. 1709 Aug 54
The purpose of the current investigation was to optimize an intranasal (IN) galantamine (an
acetylcholinesterase
inhibitor used for treatment of Alzheimer's disease) formulation using an in vitro tissue model, to correlate those results to in vivo bioavailability, and to compare emetic response to oral dosing. A design-of-experiments (DOE) based formulation screening employing an in vitro tissue model of human nasal epithelium was used to assess drug permeability, tight junction modulation, and cellular toxicity. In vivo studies in rats compared pharmacokinetic (PK) profiles of different formulations dosed intranasally. Finally, studies in ferrets evaluated PK and gastrointestinal (GI) related side effects of oral compared to nasal dosage forms. Galantamine permeation was enhanced without increasing cytotoxicity. Pharmacokinetic testing in rats confirmed the improved drug bioavailability and demonstrated an in vitro-in vivo correlation. Compared to oral dosing, IN galantamine resulted in a dramatically lowered incidence of GI-related side effects, e.g., retching and
emesis
. These findings illustrate that IN delivery represents an attractive alternative to oral dosing for this important Alzheimer's disease therapeutic. To our knowledge, the data herein represent the first direct confirmation of reducing GI-related side effects for IN galantamine compared to oral dosing.
...
PMID:In vitro formulation optimization of intranasal galantamine leading to enhanced bioavailability and reduced emetic response in vivo. 1717 48
To date, the primary treatments for Alzheimer's disease with proven efficacy have been
acetylcholinesterase
inhibitors that prevent the hydrolysis of acetylcholine (ACh) in the synaptic cleft, thereby prolonging its activity. Although these agents have some benefit in alleviating cognitive impairment, they have limited clinical utility because of insufficient efficacy and marginal tolerability. Within the last decade, there has been much experimental support for the use of therapeutics that directly target nicotinic ACh receptors (nAChRs) to improve cognitive function and slow neurodegenerative disease progression. These findings have spurred considerable research efforts to develop ligands selective for nAChRs, such as ABT-418 (Arneric et al., 1995), SIB-1553 (Bontempi et al., 2001), TC-2403 (Lippiello et al., 1996), and TC-2559 (Bencherif et al., 2000). There is abundant evidence that nAChR modulators have the potential to alleviate cognitive impairment in demented states. In addition to improving cognitive function, a large body of research implicates a role for nAChRs in neuroprotection, suggesting potential for disease modification. An impact of nAChR agonists on disease progression would provide an advantage over currently available treatments for memory loss. The profile of previous nAChR-targeted clinical candidates has not been adequate to warrant further development owing to poor oral bioavailability, side effects, and/or lack of efficacy. Thus, a challenge in nAChR drug design and development has been the reduction of undesirable effects that result from activity at specific nAChRs in the CNS and PNS, including cardiovascular toxicity,
emesis
, seizures, and hypothermia.
...
PMID:Ispronicline: a novel alpha4beta2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor-selective agonist with cognition-enhancing and neuroprotective properties. 1719 10
Cholinergic receptors (AChR) are reported altered in brains from schizophrenic patients, and a growing body of evidence suggests that muscarinic receptor agonists exhibit antipsychotic potential. Centrally acting selective muscarinic receptor agonists are currently not available for clinical use, but
acetylcholinesterase
(
AChE
) inhibitors, which indirectly stimulate AChR by blocking the breakdown of acetylcholine by
AChE
, are widely used in the clinic against Alzheimer's disease.
AChE
inhibitors have been reported to exhibit antipsychotic efficacy in Alzheimer's disease patients, and these compounds have also been investigated as adjunctive treatment to antipsychotic medication in schizophrenic patients with varying results. However, monotherapy with
AChE
inhibitors in schizophrenic patients has not been evaluated. We wanted to investigate the antipsychotic potential of the
AChE
inhibitor galantamine, which also allosterically potentiates nicotinic receptor stimulation. To this end, we investigated its ability to antagonize d-amphetamine-induced psychotic-like behavior in extrapyramidal side effects (EPS)-primed Cebus monkeys. Galantamine inhibited d-amphetamine-induced unrest, arousal, and stereotypy. Side effects such as
emesis
, sedation, and EPS were minor or not existing. The results indicate that
AChE
inhibitors have antipsychotic potentials and suggest that clinical trials investigating antipsychotic effects of
AChE
inhibitors as monotherapy would be of interest.
...
PMID:The acetylcholinesterase inhibitor galantamine inhibits d-amphetamine-induced psychotic-like behavior in Cebus monkeys. 1737 45
Inhibition of
acetylcholinesterase
improves symptoms of dementia in patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Dementia in PD has a cumulative incidence of up to 80% and is mainly caused by a distinct cholinergic deficit. Objectives of this investigator initiated multicenter open label trial were to confirm the efficacy of donepezil in the treatment of dementia in PD patients and to investigate the tolerability and safety of donepezil. The Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE)-score significantly increased in patients, who finished the trial. A detailed analysis of the various items of the MMSE revealed, that only task performance of orientation and recall significantly improved. Scores of the short syndrome test and the Clinical Global Impression Scale improved, motor impairment did not increase. Only 14 out of 24 PD patients finished the trial due to predominant onset of
vomiting
, nausea, dizziness and confusion. This may result from the titration regime of donepezil, that allows only 5 and 10 mg dosages. Participants with premature study termination had a significant longer duration of PD, less motivation and sleep disturbances at night. Treatment with donepezil was only effective in PD patients with dementia, who experience nearly no side effects from the drug.
...
PMID:The DONPAD-study--treatment of dementia in patients with Parkinson's disease with donepezil. 1744 12
Nausea and/or
vomiting
are frequent dose-limiting class effects of
cholinesterase
inhibitors, occurring mostly during the dose-escalation phase. These untoward effects make it difficult to increase rivastigmine dosage above 6 mg daily in most patients. The antiemetic domperidone was given to 22 patients with Alzheimer's disease (9 men, 13 women; mean age 74.5+/-4.6 years; mean age at diagnosis: 73.1+/-5.0 years) in 15-day prophylactic cycles, starting 15 days before each dose escalation of rivastigmine above 6 mg daily. Only four patients (18.2%) experienced nausea, which was so mild that all patients reached >or=9 mg rivastigmine daily and 16 (72.7%) reached and maintained the top dosage (12 mg daily). An improvement or stabilization of Mini Mental State Examination scores was achieved in 54.5% of the patients. The treatment regimen was well tolerated; no patients stopped treatment because of adverse events. Further investigations assessing the role of domperidone in the prevention of rivastigmine-related gastrointestinal disturbances are warranted.
...
PMID:Domperidone is effective in the prevention of rivastigmine-related gastrointestinal disturbances. 1763 13
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