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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The main purpose of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an oral fluid therapy alone or combined with parenteral administration of a 5% dextrose solution to attenuate the clinical signs and the pathophysiological consequences of transmissible gastroenteritis in neonatal piglets. Eighteen two day old conventional piglets were infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus while six others were used as controls (Group 1). At the onset of diarrhea, infected piglets were divided into three groups of six (Groups 2, 3 and 4). Piglets in group 2 were not treated and were fed a milk replacer ad libitum. Piglets in group 3 were removed from the milk replacer and placed on an oral glucose-glycine-electrolyte solution ad libitum. Those in group 4 were placed on oral fluid therapy and received a 5% dextrose solution intraperitoneally at the rate of 25 mL/kg of body weight once a day. Blood samples were collected in heparin within minutes after the infected piglets became comatose and from the controls at four or five days of age. The following variables were measured: packed red cell volume, blood pH, total plasma protein and bicarbonate, blood
urea
nitrogen, and plasma glucose, creatinine, chloride, inorganic phosphorus, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium.
Vomiting
and diarrhea appeared 12 to 24 hours postinoculation in the infected piglets. There was a sudden and rapid progression into a comatose and moribund state one or two days later whether the infected piglets were treated or not.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Fluid therapy trials in neonatal piglets infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 407 36
Thirteen patients with hypercalcaemia due to carcinoma received inorganic phosphate, orally or intravenously, as palliative treatment for their high serum calcium levels. The serum calcium promptly fell in all patients fully treated, and there was a striking clinical improvement in most patients. The blood
urea
was usually unchanged or became nearer to normal, while the serum phosphate altered variably. Only two of the eight patients who were studied at necropsy had microscopical nephrocalcinosis; corneal calcification was evident in both before phosphate treatment was started.This oral inorganic phosphate (1 gramme thrice daily) is a safe and effective means of treating hypercalcaemia due to carcinoma. An intravenous infusion of 1 gramme over eight hours may sometimes be required initially for patients who are
vomiting
.
...
PMID:Phosphate treatment of hypercalcaemia due to carcinoma. 417 70
The use of intraamniotic injection of hypertonic solutions for termination of pregnancy during the second trimester has been generally adopted. Because of side effects in such treatment with other agents, it was decided to use intraamniotic instillation of
urea
solution (
Urevert
) to induce midtrimester therapeutic abortion in 38 patients. The method was successful in 35 patients (92%) with a mean injection/abortion interval of 26.1 hours, shorter than that with the use of hypertonic saline or hypertonic glucose solutions. The side effects of headache, nausea, and
vomiting
were mild, and an endometritis in 1 patient responded well to antibiotic treatment. Intravenous oxytocin drip was necessary in patients with hypotonic contractions or in those who failed to react within 36 hours after injection. In 3 cases of missed labor, the
urea
solution injected induced labor within 5-8 hours, with no side effects. The mean in-patient hospital time was 4.3 days.
...
PMID:Termination of midtrimester pregnancy by intramniotic injection of urea. 482 62
The metabolic response to human growth hormone (HGH) was studied in five obese subjects in the fed state and during prolonged (5-6 wk) starvation. In the fed state (three subjects), HGH induced an elevation in basal serum insulin concentration, a minimal increase in blood and urine ketone levels, and a marked reduction in urinary nitrogen and potassium excretion resulting in positive nitrogen and potassium balance. In prolonged fasting (four subjects), HGH administration resulted in a 2- to 3-fold increase in serum insulin which preceded a 50% elevation in blood glucose. Persistence of the lipolytic effects of HGH was indicated by a rise in free fatty acids and glycerol. The response differed markedly from the fed state in that blood beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate levels rose by 20-40%, resulting in total blood ketone acid concentrations of 10-12 mmoles/liter, ketonuria of 150-320 mmoles/day, and increased urinary potassium loss. The subjects complained of nausea,
vomiting
, weakness, and myalgias. Despite a 50% reduction in
urea
excretion during HGH administration, total nitrogen loss remained unchanged as urinary ammonia excretion rose by 50% and correlated directly with the degree of ketonuria. It is concluded that in prolonged starvation (a) HGH may have a direct insulinotropic effect on the beta cell independent of alterations in blood glucose concentration, (b) persistence of the lipolytic action of HGH results in severe exaggeration of starvation ketosis and interferes with its anticatabolic action by necessitating increased urinary ammonia loss, and (c) failure of HGH to reduce net protein catabolism in starvation suggests that this hormone does not have a prime regulatory role in conserving body protein stores during prolonged fasting.
...
PMID:Metabolic response to human growth hormone during prolonged starvation. 554 Jan 76
264 women (about 50% private patients), all less than 40 years old and none with history contraindicating oral contraception, were started on a regimen with Ovral (.5 mg norgestrel and .05 mg ethinyl estradiol). Medication started on Day 5 of a menstrual cycle. Then therapy followed a 3 weeks on, 7 days off schedule. Patients continued for 1-22 cycles (mean 7 cycles) for a total of 1918 cycles. Despite the omission of 42 doses by 32 patients, no pregnancies occurred. The percentages of cycles with average flow, spotting, breakthrough bleeding, and dysmenorrhea were 74.4, 2.5, .4, and .6, respectively. The incidence of amenorrhea, .2%, was spectacularly low in comparison with findings in other studies. Papanicolaou smears (483) were all normal (Class I or II). Morphologic changes seen at endometrial biopsy (61) were similar to those produced by other available progestogen-estrogen compounds. No significant variation from control findings (1878) were found in 1463 laboratory studies. The studies included leukocyte and differential counts (724), and determinations of hemoglobin and hematocrit (388), fasting blood sugar and blood
urea
nitrogen (114), bilirubin and liver function (61), and renal function (176). Minor symptoms (nausea,
vomiting
, headache, etc.) were few and disappeared after the first few cycles. The preparation suppresses ovulation (probably through action of the estrogen), probably alters the cervical mucus to inhibit sperm penetration, possibly interferes with nidation, and may interfere with follicular development.
...
PMID:Norgestrel, a low dose, oral progestogen for fertility contro. Supplementary report. 564 94
Data from six randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials of aspirin, involving a total of 10,703 postmyocardial infarction (MI) patients, are compared and combined. After adjustment for a number of prognostically important baseline factors, the reduction in total mortality by aspirin was 10% (P = 0.044). This beneficial trend was particularly pronounced during the 1st yr of daily aspirin ingestion, but did not differ between patients who entered the trial less than 6 mo and greater than 6 mo after their last MI. Significant beneficial effects of aspirin were noted with respect to 1) diagnosis of definite nonfatal MI and 2) hospitalization for greater than 2 wk for MI. Significant adverse effects of aspirin were noted with respect to the side effects of stomach pain, heartburn and
vomiting
, elevation of systolic blood pressure to greater than 160 mm Hg, and elevation of serum
urea
nitrogen and serum uric acid levels to the abnormal range.
...
PMID:Aspirin in coronary heart disease. Comparison of six clinical trials. 634 61
The basis of conservative treatment in chronic uremia is the restriction of protein, which lowers blood
urea
and diminishes nausea,
vomiting
and other uremic symptoms. Protein restriction to less than 25-30 g per day in adult patients may lead to negative nitrogen balance and protein depletion, which can be prevented by supplementing the diet with essential amino acids or a mixture of essential keto acid analogues and amino acids. The traditional view has been that low protein diet affords symptomatic relief in chronic uremia but does not effect the progression of renal failure. However, recent clinical results, mostly retrospective, suggest that protein restriction may retard or halt progression. This has led to a renewed interest in therapy with low protein diet and essential amino acids or keto analogues, since this form of treatment may postpone the time when the patient has to be started on dialysis, or even make dialysis unnecessary. It is not settled by which mechanism protein restriction effects progression of renal failure. According to one hypothesis, hyperphosphatemia (high Ca X P product) is harmful for the diseased kidneys; protein restriction is beneficial, since a low protein diet is generally also low in phosphate. An alternative hypothesis suggests that glomerular hyperfiltration in the remaining nephrons of the diseased kidneys is harmful and leads to glomerulosclerosis; low protein intake protects the kidney by abolishing glomerular hyperfiltration.
...
PMID:Discovery and rediscovery of low protein diet. 636 67
We report a case of a 56 year old woman who presented with a long history of chronic attacks of
vomiting
. On admission to hospital she was cachectic, and attempted parenteral nutrition induced coma. The illness was found to be due to citrullinaemia, a metabolic disorder of the
urea
cycle. Our patient is the oldest with this disorder so far described in the literature. The main points of the case and its investigation are outlined: hyperammonaemia, amino acid chromatogram, measurement of enzyme activity in skin and liver biopsy material. The therapeutic measures which led to cure are of particular interest.
...
PMID:Chronic vomiting in a case of citrullinaemia detected after treatment by total parenteral nutrition. 642 21
Supravesical urinary diversion using a jejunal conduit may be associated with hyponatremia, hypochloremic-acidosis, hyperkalemia, azotemia, and a clinical picture of nausea,
vomiting
, dehydration, muscular weakness, elevated temperature, and lethargy. This syndrome is secondary to the loss of sodium chloride into the urine passing through the conduit and absorption of potassium and
urea
from it. Treatment and prevention of this syndrome consist of adequate supplements of sodium chloride and hydration. Intravenous hyperalimentation as the precipitating factor of a severe form of this syndrome and its successful management are described. The pathophysiology of the jejunal conduit syndrome is also discussed. Great selectivity and extreme caution are recommended with respect to the use of intravenous hyperalimentation in patients with jejunal conduits.
...
PMID:The pathophysiology of the jejunal conduit syndrome and its exacerbation by parenteral hyperalimentation. 642 49
The clinical and biochemical data obtained in 85 patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) are presented. DKA is an acute exacerbation of diabetes, a characteristic clinico-biochemical syndrome including increasing thirst, polyuria, adynamia, dryness of the skin and mucous membranes, anorexia, nausea,
vomiting
, occasionally abdominal pain, Kussmaul's breath, acetone odour in the exhaled air, circulatory collapse, prerenal azotemia, stupor, coma. Glycemia level exceeds 19 mmol/l, blood pH over 7.3. The disease is marked by neutrophilic leukocytosis, blood count shift to the left, elevated blood content of creatinine and
urea
. It was established that the degree of consciousness abnormality does not always correlate with the degree of the clinico-biochemical manifestations of DKA. During DKA, coma occurs relatively seldom (5.9%). It is suggested to use the term "diabetic ketoacidosis", incipient or marked, indicating the degree of consciousness abnormality (stupor, coma).
...
PMID:[Diabetic ketoacidosis (causes, clinico-biochemical correlations and terminology problems)]. 644 Dec 97
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