Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C1332347 (ADH)
2,230 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

CSF and Plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and cyclic GMP (cGMP), which is regarded as a second messenger of ANP, were measured intermittently during the progress of canine kaolin-induced hydrocephalus. Data were analyzed being divided into three groups, normal, acute (within 2 weeks after intracisternal injection of kaolin suspension) and chronic (from 3 to 4 weeks after injection of kaolin suspension) stages of hydrocephalus. The presence of ventricular dilatation was evaluated by MRI or postmortal dissection. ANP, cGMP in CSF and CSF pressure significantly increased in the acute stage of hydrocephalus. In the chronic stage, ANP in CSF and CSF pressure had no statistical difference with data of the normal stage. Cyclic GMP in CSF kept significantly high value in the chronic stage of hydrocephalus. CSF concentrations of Na, CSF osmolarity, plasma ANP, plasma cGMP, plasma ADH, serum Na and serum osmolarity did not change significantly in the course of hydrocephalus. There was a significant positive correlation between ANP in CSF and CSF pressure. ANP in CSF did not correlate with degree of ventricular dilatation. Cyclic GMP in CSF did not correlate with ANP in CSF, nor with CSF pressure. These data suggest that concentration of ANP in CSF may alter directly or indirectly depending on CSF pressure in kaolin-induced hydrocephalus. And cGMP in CSF was suggested to depend not on ANP in CSF, but on other unknown factors in kaolin-induced hydrocephalus.
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PMID:[Alteration of atrial natriuretic peptide and cyclic GMP in cerebrospinal fluid in canine kaolin-induced hydrocephalus]. 132 21

The symptomatology and outcome of three of our own cases with Melphalan overdose are presented. The literature regarding Melphalan overdose and its toxicity when given in normal and high doses is reviewed. Two of our cases with injection of less than 100 mg/m2 recovered from marrow aplasia within 3 weeks without major complications. The third patient died 6 days after injection of 290 mg/m2 Melphalan, probably due to cardiac arrhythmia before complete marrow failure had established. After intravenous application of more than 125 mg/m2 gastrointestinal side effects such as hemorrhagic diarrhea or even bowl perforation may be observed. These, together with a syndrome of inadequate ADH-secretion and electrolyte disturbances were the predominant clinical problems and the reasons for early death before infectious or bleeding complications due to prolonged marrow aplasia occur. Therapeutic measures are discussed. Due to the lack of a clinically useful antidote and detoxification method only symptomatic treatment is recommended. Colony stimulating factors such as GM-CSF G-CSF may improve the prognosis of moderate to severe Melphalan overdose.
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PMID:[Overdose with melphalan (Alkeran): symptoms and treatment. A review]. 219 88

Treatment of bacterial meningitis in children requires the choice of the optimal antimicrobial substance: besides the in vitro susceptibility also pharmacokinetic parameters (CSF penetration and elimination) have to be considered. A careful medical history and a few laboratory tests (gram-stain and antigen determination) provide a preliminary bacterial diagnosis within less than one hour. In addition to the identification of the causative organism also the determination of the number of colony forming units per milliliter CSF is of crucial importance. A rapid bacterial cell kill of high numbers of pneumococci, meningococci and streptococci group B overwhelms the CSF with endotoxins with rapidly increasing cerebral edema. Applying a slowly increasing dosage regimen proved effective in preventing this detrimental effects. Supportive therapy e.g. treatment of septic shock, disseminated intravascular coagulation, cerebral edema and anticonvulsive therapy is of paramount importance. Inadequate ADH secretion in the majority of patients requires a restricted fluid and electrolyte supplementation. By this combined therapeutic approach a remarkable low lethality rate and a low number of patients with late sequelae was seen.
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PMID:[Treatment of purulent meningitis in childhood]. 265 17

In a randomized study, 20 patients received temazepam 20 mg orally the night before and 20 mg in the morning of an operation performed under spinal analgesia (Group I); 20 patients received flunitrazepam I mg similarly (Group 2). Different aspects of the premedication were evaluated verbally, with the aid of a visual analogue scale, Maddox wing apparatus, the critical flicker fusion threshold test, blood pressure and heart rate measurements, serum and CSF cortisol and plasma ADH measurements, as well as CSF drug level determinations. Clinically, temazepam 20 mg proved to be comparable with flunitrazepam I mg, although the latter more effectively prevented cardiovascular changes and pre-operative hormonal stress reaction. No correlation was found between the CSF drug level (bioassayed by radioreceptor assay) and the clinical response of the two benzodiazepines, nor was there any correlation between the cortisol or ADH levels versus the CSF drug levels. On the whole, flunitrazepam proved to be marginally better than temazepam as an oral premedicant.
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PMID:Temazepam versus flunitrazepam as an oral premedication in adult surgical patients. 289 5

1. Tonicity dominates the release of ADH with similar sensitivities (0.2-1 pg/ml per mOsm/kg) for both birds and mammals. 2. There is an inverse relationship between the volume of the extracellular fluid compartments and the plasma level of ADH. 3. Angiotensin II formation is governed by volume factors. 4. In birds the factors reducing the delivery of Na+ to the nephron distal tubules stimulate ANGII formation. 5. Mammals have a high vascular constrictor sensitivity to ADH and ANGII; there is little or no vascular sensitivity to these in birds. 6. In birds and mammals the subfornical organ and other circumventricular organs have receptors that specifically bind ANGII. 7. Dog and duck CSF levels of ADH and AII indicate their function as specific mediators of intrinsic neuronal systems controlling salt and fluid balance.
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PMID:Central and systemic antidiuretic hormone and angiotensin II in salt and fluid balance of birds as compared to mammals. 290 89

Vasopressin (ADH) was measured in CSF and plasma in 75 evaluable patients with known or suspected CNS metastases from small-cell bronchogenic carcinoma (SCBC), and in 66 control patients having neither malignant disease nor organic CNS disease. The presence of CNS metastases was confirmed or excluded on the basis of computed tomographic scans, neurologic examination, and autopsy. Twenty-four of the 75 patients had no CNS metastases. Ten of the 51 patients with CNS metastases had leptomeningeal carcinomatosis (MC). CSF-ADH was significantly increased in patients with MC (P less than .05), but not in patients having exclusively parenchymatous CNS metastases. Taking 2 pg/mL (95th percentile of control patients) as the upper limit of normal, 15 SCBC patients had elevated CSF-ADH, including 12 patients with CNS metastases and six patients with MC. The CSF-ADH to plasma ADH ratio was significantly increased in patients with CNS metastases (P less than .05). Patients without CNS metastases had a ratio less than or equal to 0.8 whereas the ratio was greater than 0.8, in 21 of the 51 patients with CNS metastases. The positive and negative predictive values with 95% confidence limits were 84% to 100% and 31% to 59%, respectively. Patients with inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH) constituted a significantly greater proportion of patients with elevated CSF-ADH than of patients with normal CSF-ADH levels (P less than .05). In addition, patients with SIADH constituted a significantly greater proportion of patients with MC than of patients with parenchymatous metastases (P less than .05). The diagnostic application of these findings is limited because of the large number of false-negative results, but it may prove to be of value in conjunction with the measurement of other tumor markers.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid vasopressin as a marker of central nervous system metastases from small-cell bronchogenic carcinoma. 298 Dec 91

The most examined tumor markers in lung cancer patients are CEA, hormonal peptides, and some neurogenic enzymes in small cell carcinoma. Calcitonin, ACTH, ADH, CEA, neurophysin, oxytocin, beta-endorphin, neuron-specific enolase, and CK BB are elevated in serum specimens in 25-75% of cases of small cell carcinoma. The level of these markers is related to the stage of the disease in groups of patients; elevated pretreatment levels decrease with tumor regression. Marker levels are not valid in defining the tumor load and the presence of disease in the individual patient. It has not yet been documented that the markers can be used for clinical decisions on antineoplastic therapy. A recent development is the finding that measurement of CSF and plasma concentrations of ADH, calcitonin, CK BB, bombesin, and neuron-specific enolase may contribute in the diagnosis of CNS metastases including meningeal carcinomatosis.
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PMID:Tumor markers in patients with lung cancer. 300 40

In the first experimental series, 10 healthy male test subjects with a high susceptibility to motion sickness showed a significant increase of ACTH, cortisol, STH, prolactin, ADH, aldosterone concentrations, and plasma renin activity after vestibular tests. The 10 subjects with a moderate susceptibility exhibited a still higher increase of the hormones, except plasma renin. The 8 test subjects with a low susceptibility displayed a considerable increase in ACTH, cortisol, and STH after vestibular stimulation. In the second experimental series, the increase of STH, cortisol, ADH, aldosterone and renin occurred immediately after rotation in the moderate susceptibility subjects and an hour after exposure in the high susceptibility subjects. This may be indicative of specific immediate adaptation mechanisms or excitation transfer in the CNS in high susceptibility persons. In the third experimental animal series, the permeability of the blood-brain barrier for 125I and IgG increased after rotation. Greater concentrations of potassium, chloride, and urea in CSF are suggestive of an inhibition process activation in the CNS and, probably, of an active urea transport by the vascular plexus epithelium which maintains constant osmotic pressure of cerebral extracellular fluid and prevents hyper-hydration of CNS neurons.
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PMID:Hormonal status and fluid electrolyte metabolism in motion sickness. 337 37

A clinical picture compatible with the syndrome of inappropriate ADH (antidiuretic hormone) secretion was observed in two patients receiving vinblastine-bleomycin chemotherapy. The mechanism by which this response is brought about is unclear. Penetration of Vinka alkaloids into CSF of humans is poor in the absence of extensive meningeal involvement, and hence an indirect method of action by a reduction in the osmotic threshold for vasopressin release has been suggested. By administering vinblastine on days 1 and 4 (instead of days 1 and 2, as suggested in the high-response regimen consisting of vinblastine, bleomycin, and cis-platinum) we have found better bone marrow tolerance and have not noticed the inappropriate ADH syndrome.
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PMID:The syndrome of inappropriate ADH secretion secondary to vinblastine-bleomycin therapy. 619 86

The term cryptic miliary tuberculosis designates a particular form of hematogenous tuberculosis in which the usual diagnostic criteria, especially the roentgenographic ones, are lacking. Two cases are reported. Initial clinical manifestations were prolonged fever, poor general condition, low blood pressure, low serum sodium, mild hepatic biological disorders, and myocarditis. No other radiological or biological features, suggestive of tuberculosis were found. In the first patient, the various visceral tuberculous localizations occurred under specific treatment, although the latter was otherwise effective. In the second patient, they were identified by pathological examination. The incidence of these occult forms of tuberculosis, where diagnosis is often established too late, and sometimes only postmortem, is not negligible. This possibility must be borne in mind in severe infectious conditions without obvious etiology, particularly when the following features are present : inadequate secretion of ADH, which often indicates latent encephalitic and meningitic involvement where CSF anomalies may be incomplete or lacking ; leucopenia or pancytopenia ; biological hepatic anomalies ; exceptionally, such as in the two cases described, cardiac involvement. Among diagnostic procedures, liver biopsy is of the utmost importance. Mere diagnostic presumption is sufficient to warrant initiation of antituberculous therapy. This ensures survival and, paradoxically, allows delayed overt clinical manifestations to develop.
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PMID:[Cryptic miliary tuberculosis. Two case-reports (author's transl)]. 628


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