Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0917801 (insomnia)
10,606 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Similar clinical and biological features in lethal catatonia (LC) and neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS) suggest a relationship between both affections and common physiopathologic mechanisms. Pharmacological effects of several drugs--dopaminergic agonists, benzodiazepines, carbamazepine--suggest an impairment of several systems of neurotransmitters. We report the case of a young woman with infantile psychosis who developed catatonic syndrome worsened by neuroleptic treatment, arising the problem of the chronology of both affections. The evolution with treatment may partially explain the physiopathology. A 18-year old woman with an history of infantile psychosis, experienced insomnia, anorexia, paradoxical agitation developed after affective traumatism (mother's hospitalization). Chlorazepate (150 mg) remained inefficient and hospitalization was necessary. The patient was dumb, prostate in bed. She presented negativism, rigidity of the four limbs, catalepsia and hyperpyrexia (38.5 degrees C). Hepatic transaminases were increased (SGOT: 71 UI/l; N < 30). After cumulated dose of levomepromazine (100 mg) profuse sudation, thermic and cardiovascular instability, alteration of consciousness, major rigidity of limbs appeared. (Blood) hepatic transaminases and muscular enzymes increased. Bacteriological samples, cerebrospinal fluid analysis, CT-scan and EEG were normal. Within 48 hours after rehydratation and bromocriptine (30 mg per day) alteration of consciousness and autonomic disorders decreased but hyperpyrexia (38 degrees C) persisted. Biological parameters were normalized 10 days later. Negativism and psychomotor inertia remained. Lorazepam (3 mg per day) failed to be clinically beneficial. On carbamazepine (600 mg per day) she started speaking and moving spontaneously. Catalepsia disappeared but rigidity and anorexia persisted. Electroconvulsivotherapy (ECT) was necessary. After 2 shocks she started standing up, walking, taking food and speaking fluently.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Acute catatonia and neuroleptic malignant syndrome. A case of infantile psychosis]. 791 82

Fluoxetine was developed as an antidepressant drug. It is more effective than placebo, but a dose-effect relation has not been established. Fluoxetine is almost as effective as tricyclic antidepressant drugs, but the available studies do not allow accurate comparisons. Fluoxetine may be less effective than tricyclic antidepressant drugs for the treatment of inpatients with severe melancholic depression, and it should not be the first choice of a drug for them. Fluoxetine may be most appropriate for patients with moderate depression who can be treated as outpatients. If there is little improvement after treatment for four to six weeks, an alternative treatment should be offered. Fluoxetine does not have the anticholinergic, hypotensive, and sedative effects of tricyclic antidepressant drugs and has no particular cardiovascular effects; overdoses do not cause serious toxic effects. Nausea, anorexia, insomnia, and nervousness--the most common side effects--may be controlled with a careful adjustment to the dose. Clinically important drug interactions may occur with monoamine oxidase inhibitors, tricyclic antidepressant drugs, and other drugs. The published data on the antidepressant effect of fluoxetine do not fully explain its popularity. One may speculate that fluoxetine has psychobiologic effects not strictly related to the biology of depression and that it acts primarily as a mood- or affect-modulating agent.
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PMID:Fluoxetine. 787 63

The chemistry, pharmacology, pharmacokinetics, clinical use, adverse effects, drug interactions, and dosage of felbamate are discussed. Felbamate (2-phenyl-1,3-propanediol dicarbamate) is chemically unrelated to any of the other currently marketed antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). It appears that felbamate, like phenobarbital and valproic acid, decreases the frequency of seizures by decreasing seizure spread and increasing seizure threshold. Oral felbamate is at least 90% absorbed, and peak concentrations are reached in one to six hours. The half-life is a little less than one day. A therapeutic range of plasma concentrations has not been determined. Felbamate has been used effectively as monotherapy and adjunctive therapy in patients with partial seizures with or without secondary generalization and as adjunctive therapy in children with partial or generalized seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Felbamate may also be safe and effective in patients with generalized, absence, atypical absence, juvenile myoclonic, infantile, and gelastic seizures. The most frequently reported adverse effects of felbamate include nausea, anorexia, vomiting, headache, fatigue, somnolence, insomnia, and increased serum aspartate aminotransferase levels. The frequency of adverse effects is greater in patients receiving other AEDs in addition to felbamate. Felbamate affects the pharmacokinetics of phenytoin, carbamazepine, valproic acid, and methsuximide; other AEDs also affect the pharmacokinetics of felbamate. The dosage of felbamate should begin at 400 mg orally three times daily and then increase by 600 mg/day every two weeks to up to 3600 mg/day. If the patient is receiving other AEDs concurrently, their dosage should be decreased as the dosage of felbamate is increased. If the goal is to switch to felbamate, the dosage should be increased weekly as the dosages of other AEDs are reduced. Felbamate offers a safe and effective alternative to other AEDs in the treatment of partial and secondarily generalized seizures; partial and generalized seizures associated with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome; and atypical absence seizures, gelastic seizures, and other difficult to control seizures.
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PMID:Felbamate: a new antiepileptic drug. 794 90

The study describes a sequential analysis of depression-related physical symptoms and their relationship to imipramine and amitriptyline plasma levels over 4 weeks of treatment in 79 unipolar and bipolar patients hospitalized for major depressive disorder. Insomnia diminished in all patients after 2 weeks of drug administration. After 4 weeks, the sleep of patients whose depressive disorder has significantly improved was nearly normal, whereas patients who remained depressed showed continued sleep impairment. Reductions in loss of appetite, weight and sexual interest paralleled mood improvement. Tricyclic plasma levels significantly correlated with improved sleep. The findings suggest a close link between depressed mood and physical symptoms during recovery from major depressive disorder.
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PMID:The pattern of physical symptom changes in major depressive disorder following treatment with amitriptyline or imipramine. 796 67

In a prospective study, the prevalence of 15 physical symptoms and symptom groups was evaluated in 1635 cancer patients referred to a pain clinic. In addition to pain, patients suffered an average of 3.3 symptoms: insomnia (59%), anorexia (48%), constipation (33%), sweating (28%), nausea (27%), dyspnea (24%), dysphagia (20%), neuropsychiatric symptoms (20%), vomiting (20%), urinary symptoms (14%), dyspepsia (11%), paresis (10%), diarrhea (6%), pruritus (6%), and dermatological symptoms (3%). While symptom prevalence was influenced by tumor site, pain intensity, and opioid treatment, only a minor relationship was seen between symptoms and gender, age, or tumor stage. The data emphasize that it is not sufficient to simply address pain during the treatment of patients with cancer pain; a more global approach to symptom management is necessary.
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PMID:Prevalence and pattern of symptoms in patients with cancer pain: a prospective evaluation of 1635 cancer patients referred to a pain clinic. 796 90

Anemia is an inevitable and potentially serious complication of chronic renal failure and one of the most important limiting factors in patient rehabilitation. Although adequate dialysis can control many of the symptoms of uremia, dialysis does not reverse anemia-associated fatigue, and thus, many patients are not rehabilitated. Human recombinant erythropoietin (epoetin) therapy has proven to be effective in reversing anemia and increasing hematocrit levels in the majority of patients with chronic renal failure. Among this patient population, increases in hematocrit level have resulted in improvements in the symptomatology of organ hypoxia, neurobehavioral indices, anorexia, insomnia, depression, and sexual disinterest and dysfunction, as well as a reduction in cardiomegaly. However, despite the availability of epoetin and the dramatic improvements in the complications associated with the anemic state observed following therapy, it appears that patient rehabilitation remains a challenge. One aspect of the continuing problem of rehabilitation appears to be the reluctance of the medical community to increase hematocrit levels above 30%, despite the fact that higher hematocrit levels are associated with greater improvements and that potential adverse events related to hemodynamic adaptation are manageable. Indeed, a comparison of the results from two Epoetin alfa clinical trials, one in which hematocrit levels were maintained at 35% and a large phase IV study in which the target hematocrit level appears to have been approximately 30%, clearly demonstrate the benefits of optimizing hematocrit levels and thus improving the potential for rehabilitation.
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PMID:In search of an optimal hematocrit level in dialysis patients: rehabilitation and quality-of-life implications. 802 33

Between 1983 and 1990 a total of 74 freestyle mountaineers and 88 mountaineers with skis attempted to climb Mount Agri (Ararat). From the freestyle group two mountaineers were affected by acclimatisation disorder at 3200 m and seven at 4200 m above sea level. Acute mountain sickness (AMS) affected four mountaineers at 4200 m, eight at 4700 m, two at 5000 m and two at 5165 m, while 49 reached the summit. Only one of the mountaineers with skis was affected by AMS (at 4200 m), while all the others reached the summit. The symptoms of acclimatisation disorder and AMS, according to their degree of frequency, were headache, weakness, dyspnoea and palpitation, anorexia, nausea, vomiting, giddiness, ataxia and insomnia. Pulse rates varied between 115 and 124/min, and breathing between 30 and 38/min.
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PMID:Cases of acute mountain sickness on Mount Agri. 803 91

Thirty children (2 to 17 years of age) with refractory partial seizures received open-label felbamate as an add-on medication to their background antiepileptic drugs. The dose was increased up to a maximum of 45 mg/kg. Compared with baseline seizure activity, there was a 53% decrease in seizure frequency during felbamate therapy; 50% of the patients had more than a 50% decrease in seizure frequency. Patients older than 10 years of age were more likely to have a favorable response. Age correlated positively with felbamate concentrations and negatively with apparent felbamate clearance. Transient weight loss occurred in 57% of the patients; the weight loss was maximal after 12 weeks of initiation of felbamate, and subsided after the twentieth week of treatment. Anorexia and insomnia were reported in 20% and 16% of the patients, respectively. Adverse effects were generally tolerable; felbamate therapy was discontinued because of side effects in only one patient, because of a rash. We conclude that felbamate can be a useful and well-tolerated medication in the treatment of refractory partial epilepsy in children. However, increased apparent clearance of this drug in younger children should be considered in treatment of this age group.
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PMID:Efficacy of felbamate in therapy for partial epilepsy in children. 807 63

A preliminary trial with fluoxetine, a 5-HT reuptake inhibitor, was carried out on two young male patients (21 and 32 years old) affected by Gilles de la Tourette syndrome. They both underwent a complete neurological evaluation also including neuroradiological, neurophysiological and neuropsychological assessment. Both patients had already been treated with benzodiazepines and amitriptyline; the older one was also given haloperidol and chlorimipramine with definite, but short-lasting improvement. During hospitalization a therapeutic trial with fluoxetine (20 mg/day in the younger patient and 40 mg/day in the older) in association with chlorimipramine (75 mg/day) was initiated, leading to a significant reduction (at least 50%) of abnormal movements and obsessive-compulsive behaviour. The older patient had no side effects while the 21 year old subject complained of insomnia, urinary retention and anorexia; despite the objective improvement, these side effects led us to modify the therapy after the first month. The favourable action of serotoninergic agents on TS symptoms supports the hypothesis that the multiple tics of the syndrome are motor compulsions.
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PMID:Serotoninergic agents in the treatment of Gilles de la Tourette's syndrome. 807 18

In common with any medical problem, careful assessment and an analytical approach are the keystones to effective symptom control in advanced cancer. When dealing with such symptoms the multi-faceted pathophysiology must be considered, and due attention paid to the affective component of pain and other symptoms. Adequate care given to history taking and a knowledge of the likely pathogenesis of symptoms in advanced cancer can prevent unnecessary investigations and fruitless trials of inappropriate symptomatic remedies. The treatment chosen should be the simplest effective regimen tailored to the individual patient. The importance of explanation to the patient cannot be overstated and is an integral part of any treatment and the sole component of many. This paper reviews the management of common symptoms in advanced cancer (dyspnoea, nausea and vomiting, constipation, anorexia-cachexia syndrome, hypercalcaemia, confusion, insomnia and depression.
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PMID:Control of common symptoms in advanced cancer. 808 Feb 22


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