Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P01185 (vasopressin)
23,126 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Although medication-induced colonotoxicity is uncommon, it is important that it be recognized, because the initial therapy for this condition is medication discontinuation. This review categorizes the association between the listed medications and colonotoxicity as "well-established" or "probable," according to the following criteria: number of clinical studies by independent clinical investigators, total number of reported cases, plausibility of an association based on experimental and pharmacologic studies, and validity of an association in each reported case. Medications associated with colonic ischemia include cocaine, ergotamine, estrogen, amphetamines, digitalis, methysergide, and vasopressin. Medications associated with colonic pseudoobstruction include narcotics, phenothiazines, vincristine, atropine or other anticholinergics, ganglionic blocking agents, and tricyclic antidepressants. Medications promoting infectious or necrotizing enterocolitis include numerous antibiotics associated with pseudomembranous colitis, deferoxamine associated with Yersinia enterocolitis, chemotherapy associated with neutropenic colitis, and hyperosmolar medications or formulas in infants. Medications associated with an allergic, inflammatory, or cytotoxic colitis include gold compounds, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, alpha-methyldopa, flucytosine, methotrexate, salicylates, and sulfasalazine. Potassium chloride, administered in slow-release wax matrices, can cause intestinal ulcers. Chronic cathartic use leads to colonic hypomotility and abdominal distention. Methysergide can cause a colonic stricture due to retroperitoneal fibrosis. Intrarectally administered compounds that have produced a toxic colitis include powerful acids, bases, and other corrosives. Enemas using hypertonic radiographic contrast agents have been associated with colitis in patients with colonic obstruction.
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PMID:Colonic toxicity of administered medications and chemicals. 812 79

Although uncommon, medication-induced colonotoxicity is important to recognize because medication cessation generally leads to prompt clinical improvement, while medication continuation results in disease exacerbation. This review categorizes the association between medications and colonotoxicity as "well-established" or "probable," according to the following criteria: total number of reported cases, number of different research groups reporting an association, experimental and pharmacologic evidence of an association, and validity of an association in each reported case. Cocaine, ergotamine, estrogen, sodium polystyrene, alosetron, amphetamines, pseudoephedrine, and vasopressin are associated with colonic ischemia. The mechanisms include vasospasm, thrombogenesis, and shunting of blood from mesenteric vessels. Narcotics, phenothiazines, vincristine, atropine, nifedipine, and tricyclic antidepressants are associated with colonic pseudo-obstruction. The mechanisms include antagonizing prokinetic neurotransmitters, stimulating antikinetic neurotransmitters, promoting dysmotility, relaxing smooth muscle, and injuring enteric neurons. Numerous antibiotics are associated with pseudomembranous colitis; ampicillin is associated with hemorrhagic colitis; chemotherapy is associated with neutropenic colitis; and deferoxamine is associated with Yersinia enterocolitis. Mechanisms of these toxicities include altering normal bowel flora, weakening immunologic defenses, promoting microorganism virulence, and mucosal injury. Gold compounds, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, alpha-methyldopa, salicylates, and sulfasalazine are associated with an inflammatory or cytotoxic colitis. The mechanisms include direct mucosal cytotoxicity, antimetabolite effects, or drug allergy. Nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, cyclo 3 fort, flutamide, lansoprazole, and ticlopidine are associated with lymphocytic colitis. The mechanisms include immunologic activation or attenuated immunologic defenses. Chronic cathartic use leads to colonic hypomotility and abdominal distention. Intrarectally administered corrosive compounds can produce a toxic colitis.
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PMID:Colonic toxicity of administered drugs and chemicals. 1518 Jul 42