Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0240066 (iron deficiency)
7,156 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Epoetin (recombinant human erythropoietin) is now a widely available though expensive treatment for the anaemia of chronic renal failure, and is effective in more than 95% of patients. Complications of epoetin in this context include hypertension in a third of cases, including hypertensive encephalopathy in a few, and thrombosis of shunts or vascular access devices. Fears that epoetin would cause progression of renal failure have not generally been confirmed, but hyperkalaemia may be a problem in the initial phase of treatment. Epoetin is up to twice as effective when administered subcutaneously rather than intravenously. Responding patients will normally do so within 3 months of starting epoetin. Failures to respond are usually due to iron deficiency or intercurrent disease. Other diseases associated with anaemia and an inappropriately low serum epoetin level include prematurity, the anaemia of cancer and rheumatoid arthritis. The baseline serum endogenous erythropoietin may provide a guide to response in some of these cases. Some encouraging results are being published. Situations where the serum erythropoietin levels are normal or elevated where epoetin has been employed include boosting of haematocrit presurgery as an adjunct to autologous blood donation, treatment of anaemic patients with myelodysplastic syndromes, and improvement of athletic performances.
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PMID:Controversies in selection of epoetin dosages. Issues and answers. 778 87

Erythropoietin has been shown to be effective both in the reversal of anaemia in patients with end-stage renal failure and to increase the volume of autologous red blood cells donated preoperatively as well as to decrease the units of homologous blood transfused. This review analyzes the side effects of erythropoietin reported in the literature for long-term administration (mainly in patients with end-stage renal failure) as well as for acute/short-term administration (in patients participating in an autologous predeposit programme). The most important adverse events reported for long-term administration are as follows: (a) arterial hypertension; (b) cerebral convulsion/hypertensive encephalopathy; (c) thrombo-embolism; (d) iron deficiency; (e) influenza-like syndrome. The numbers given for these side effects are mainly taken from the first and dose-finding studies in patients with renal failure. These figures differ very much from the data given in controlled studies analyzing adverse events as well. Summarizing the results from controlled, multi-center trials in patients with end-stage renal failure or in AIDS patients, no significant differences have been observed between the control group and the patients treated with erythropoietin. The overall-incidence of side effects occurring in either group of these two studies was of approximately 83% and 95%, respectively. In contrast to these results the data published for the dose finding/treatment studies is approximately 30% for development of arterial hypertension, approximately 5% for occurrence of cerebral convulsion/hypertensive encephalopathy, approximately 10% for thrombo-embolic complications/clotting of vascular access, approximately 50% for development of iron deficiency, and approximately 10% for symptoms summarized as influenza-like syndrome.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Adverse events of erythropoietin in long-term and in acute/short-term treatment. 795 Jan 71