Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We randomly assigned 46 patients (mean age, 11.7 years; range, 4.5 to 32.8) with newly diagnosed
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus within two weeks of beginning
insulin
to receive either corticosteroids for 10 weeks plus daily azathioprine for one year or no immunosuppressive therapy. Half the 20 immunosuppressed patients completing the one-year trial had satisfactory metabolic outcomes (hemoglobin A1c less than 6.8 percent; stimulated peak C peptide greater than 0.5 nmol per liter;
insulin
dose less than 0.4 U per kilogram of body weight per day) as compared with only 15 percent of the controls. Three of 20 immunosuppressed patients, but no controls, were
insulin
independent at one year. Two of these continue to receive azathioprine without
insulin
after more than 27 months of follow-up. The response to immunosuppression correlated with older age, better initial metabolic status, and lymphopenia (less than 1800 lymphocytes per cubic millimeter) resulting from immunosuppression. The side effects of azathioprine included
vomiting
in one patient and mild hair loss in several others. Prednisone use resulted in a transient cushingoid appearance, weight gain, and hyperglycemia. The growth rate remained normal in all patients. We conclude that early immunosuppression with short-term use of corticosteroids plus daily azathioprine can improve metabolic control in some patients with
insulin
-dependent diabetes mellitus, but results from this unblinded study are preliminary and require further confirmation and long-term follow-up.
...
PMID:Immunosuppression with azathioprine and prednisone in recent-onset insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 304 45
Bulimia patients claim to crave sweets and since as clinical evidence suggests that the food consumed during eating binges often contains large amounts of carbohydrates, hormones involved in carbohydrate metabolism might be affected in bulimia. We therefore performed a 4-hr glucose tolerance test (GTT), using 100 g oral glucose and inquired about attitudes toward sweets. Thirteen female patients, with a mean age of 23.3 years, who had had bulimia from 3 to 7 years but whose binge-eating/
vomiting
behavior was largely controlled at the time of testing, were compared to 14 age-matched healthy female controls with a mean age of 24.4 years. All bulimic patients and most controls had liked sweets as children and still liked sweets. Significantly more bulimic patients than controls stated they overate on sweets and avoided sweets. Glucose utilization and the
insulin
, glucagon, growth hormone (GH), and pancreatic polypeptide (PP) response curves in the bulimic patients were within the normal range. Fasting plasma levels of glucose,
insulin
, glucagon, GH, cortisol, free fatty acids (FFA), and PP were not different from controls. There was a trend in bulimic patients to have lower plasma FFA levels and higher plasma cortisol levels during the GTT than controls. The findings suggest that, given body weight maintenance and adequate nutrition, patients with bulimia nervosa have normal glucose tolerance and normal hormonal responses following an oral glucose load.
...
PMID:Hormone and metabolite plasma levels after oral glucose in bulimia and healthy controls. 304 27
In patients with eating disorders, we evaluated pancreatic abnormalities using serum elastase 1 measurement by RIA and the 50 g oral glucose tolerance test (50 g OGTT). Twenty-one patients had anorexia nervosa (AN) with bulimia and
vomiting
(AN-B group), 30 had AN without bulimia or
vomiting
(AN-R group), and 25 had bulimia with normal body weight (B group). The serum elastase 1 level was determined on admission and repeated after body weight gain in 43 anorectic patients. The 50 g OGTT was performed within 2 weeks after admission. The serum elastase 1 level in the AN-B group (363 +/- 47 ng/dl, M +/- SE), and in the AN-R group (352 +/- 37) were significantly higher than that in the B group (242 +/- 18) or in the healthy female controls (191 +/- 10; n = 13). A significant decrease of serum elastase 1 was observed before and after body weight gain; however, there was no significant correlation between the serum elastase 1 level and
insulin
response to the 50 g OGTT. Elevation of the serum elastase 1 level in AN suggests pancreatic abnormalities other than those related to endocrinological events.
...
PMID:Pancreatic abnormalities in patients with eating disorders. 307 Jun 20
A 59-year-old woman with metastatic breast carcinoma presented with weight loss,
vomiting
, and polyuria. Basal endocrine testing revealed low levels of thyroxine, cortisol, and gonadotropins, and the presence of diabetes insipidus. Direct stimulation of the pituitary with hypophysiotropic hormones indicated intact pituitary reserve.
Insulin
-induced hypoglycemia, however, failed to increase plasma cortisol or growth hormone levels significantly. On computed tomographic scanning, a lesion was found in the area of the hypothalamus. Thus, a functional abnormality of the hypothalamic-pituitary axis causing clinically significant hypothalamic hypopituitarism was not clearly apparent following administration of hypothalamic releasing factors but was demonstrable with indirect stimulation via
insulin
-induced hypoglycemia.
Insulin
-induced hypoglycemia remains an important diagnostic test in the evaluation of hypopituitarism.
...
PMID:Hypophysiotropic hormone testing in a patient with hypothalamic hypopituitarism. 308 91
A 41-year-old male with a 25-year history of diabetes mellitus requiring 25 to 30 units of neutral protamine hagedorn (NPH)
insulin
daily was found dead at home. Recent history revealed that he was well until the last four days of life when he had the onset of nausea,
vomiting
, and anorexia coinciding with procurement of a new bottle of
insulin
from his pharmacist. Pertinent autopsy findings included coronary and aortic atherosclerosis, a peptic ulcer, and diabetic glomerulopathy. Chemical analysis of the vitreous humor, including glucose (813 mg/dL) and acetone (40 mg/dL), revealed that he died of diabetic ketoacidosis. Further investigation revealed that the pharmacist had accidentally substituted regular
insulin
, with a duration of action of up to 6 h as opposed to 24 to 28 h, for NPH. Cultures of blood and of the regular
insulin
yielded no growth. Analysis of this case emphasizes the importance of obtaining a careful medical and medication history and the usefulness of vitreous electrolytes when investigating a sudden death in a diabetic.
...
PMID:Pharmaceutical error resulting in fatal diabetic ketoacidosis. 308 89
The plasma concentration of arginine vasopressin (AVP) is increased in diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA) in man and the rat. Although haemodynamic changes and nausea/
emesis
may account for the increased secretion of AVP in severe human DKA, they appear not to be responsible in moderate DKA. Streptozotocin-treated rats were studied to investigate other factors possibly involved in the secretion of AVP in DKA. Wistar rats were injected i.p. with streptozotocin (150 mg/kg body weight). Diabetic rats were maintained on 3-4 units protamine-zinc
insulin
(PZI)/day for 11 days, after which PZI was withdrawn for 3 days in half the rats. The plasma concentration of AVP was greater in rats with DKA than in normal controls (mean 11.4 pmol/l compared with 1.6 pmol/l; P less than 0.05). Rats with DKA had higher plasma osmolality and concentrations of blood glucose, beta-hydroxybutyrate and acetoacetate, but lower plasma carbon dioxide content than diabetic and normal controls (P less than 0.05). There were no differences in plasma levels of sodium, urea or haematocrit between rats with DKA and controls. In a separate study involving the same procedures, daily systolic blood pressure was measured using a tail cuff to occlude arterial inflow to the tail, and subsequent detection of the cuff pressure at which the first arterial pulsation appeared. No significant differences were detected between normal and diabetic rats and rats with DKA. Exponential relationships between plasma osmolality and plasma AVP (correlation coefficient, r = + 0.75; P less than 0.01), and plasma ketone bodies and plasma AVP (r = +0.60; P less than 0.05) were obtained.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Possible mechanisms responsible for the rise in plasma vasopressin associated with diabetic ketoacidosis in the rat. 312 19
Bulimia nervosa, a common eating disorder usually characterized by binge eating and self-induced
vomiting
, may also involve abuse of prescription diuretics. This article describes four patients who abused prescription diuretics in large quantities (up to 2 g/d of furosemide) for extended periods of time. Physical examination and laboratory values provided few clues to the diagnosis of bulimia nervosa. Other eating-related behaviors previously linked to bulimia nervosa--including abuse of diet pills, illicit amphetamines, and laxatives, as well as withholding of
insulin
in one diabetic patient--were present in these cases. Usually the patients' primary physicians were not aware of these problems. Physicians should be aware that patients requesting prescription diuretics may have bulimia nervosa.
...
PMID:Prescription diuretic abuse in patients with bulimia nervosa. 319 66
Responses of neurons of the canine area postrema were recorded to ionophoretic application of
insulin
, apomorphine, leucine-enkephalin and glutamate. Each excited the neurons directly in a dose-dependent fashion. Like apomorphine and leucine enkephalin, which are known to induce
emesis
by activation of area postrema neurons,
insulin
given systemically induced
emesis
in intact dogs but not in animals with area postrema ablations. These results provide further support for a critical role of the area postrema in triggering the emetic reflex, and are the first definitive demonstration of a direct excitatory action of
insulin
on mammalian neurons.
...
PMID:Insulin excites neurons of the area postrema and causes emesis. 352 15
The currently recognized toxic effects of quinine in humans are identified and the problems of management of overdosage of quinine are discussed. Quinine, available therapeutically as sulphate or hydrochloride salts, also is widely used in tonic water, and there are several case reports of allergic reactions to the drug when a patient has consumed the drug in this way. Another unintentional source of poisoning is its use as an adulterant in heroin for "street" use. This appears to be a problem in the US. Quinine, termed a "general protoplasmic poison" is toxic to many bacteria, yeasts, and trypanosomes, as well as to malarial plasmodia. Quinine has local anesthetic action but also is an irritant. The irritant effects may be responsible in part for the nausea associated with its clinical use. In addition it has a mild antipyretic effect. Several features are common to both an acute single overdose in self-poisoning and accumulation of quinine during therapy for malaria: together they are termed cinchonism. Auditory symptoms, gastrointestinal disturbances, vasodilatation, sweating, and headache occur with moderately elevated plasma quinine concentration. As these rise, increasingly severe visual disturbances and then cardiac and neurologic features occur. Mild nausea may be the only symptom, but with large overdoses profuse
vomiting
, abdominal pain, and diarrhea may occur. These result from a combination of the local irritant effect of quinine on the gut and the central effects of quinine on the chemoreceptor trigger zone. Vasodilatation and sweating are well recognized, and tinnitus is common. Visual symptoms usually are delayed, and blindness may not be discovered for a day or more. Aspirin-sensitive patients, and others, may develop angioedema by nonimmunological mechanisms in response to drugs, and quinine has been reported to produce pseudo-allergic reactions in aspirin-sensitive patients. Quinine also can cause drug-induced thrombocytopenia and purpura. In patients suffering with malaria due to "Plasmodium falciparum," anemia and acute intravascular hemolysis with renal failure are recognized complications. There appears to be little evidence in the literature in support of the folk tradition of quinine as an inducer of abortion. Quinine is known to cause deterioration in patients with myasthenia gravis and erythema multiforme, to stimulate
insulin
release in patients receiving treatment for falicparum malaria, and to be responsible at times for ataxia following moderate overdosage. Clinically, quinine poisoning is observed in 3 situations: self-poisoning; accidentally; and following use of quinine in excessive doses in the hope of achieving abortion. Treatment courses are reviewed.
...
PMID:Quinine toxicity. 354 70
Thirty experimental and fifteen control Wistar rats were studied to determine whether hypoglycin A influences
insulin
levels in the body to contribute to the state of hypoglycemia usually observed in Jamaican
vomiting
sickness, a condition arising after ingestion of unripe ackees. This fruit also grows in other Caribbean islands, as well as North and Central America. Hypoglycin A is one of the toxic compounds found in unripe ackees and is capable of inducing hypoglycemia. A fall in blood glucose occurred after administration of hypoglycin A. The lowest level of 42.60 +/- 4.84 mg/dl was attained 3 hr after administration of the drug. This alteration of blood glucose from the fasting level of 80.31 +/- 5.20 mg/dl was significant (P less than 0.01). The blood glucose level in the control rats showed no significant change from the fasting level. The
insulin
level in portal and peripheral blood showed no significant change. Results showed that, although hypoglycin A induced severe hypoglycemia after intravenous application, there was no significant change in
insulin
levels. This observation suggests that hypoglycin A has a mechanism of action other than an alteration in
insulin
levels to induce hypoglycemia.
...
PMID:Effect of hypoglycin A on insulin release. 354 29
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>