Therapeutic Considerations (therapeutic + consideration)

Distribution by Scientific Domains
Distribution within Medical Sciences


Selected Abstracts


Pharmacologic and Therapeutic Considerations in Hypertension Therapy With Calcium Channel Blockers: Focus on Verapamil

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION, Issue 2 2007
Domenic A. Sica MD
In the past 2 decades, calcium channel blockers have emerged as important and useful agents for treating hypertension. The safety of this drug class has been vigorously debated for some time, and it has only been in the past few years that such debate has been quieted by favorable outcomes data with these compounds. Calcium channel blockers are a heterogeneous group of compounds as alike as they are dissimilar. Calcium channel blockers can be separated into dihydropyridine and nondihydropyridine subclasses, with representatives of the latter being verapamil and diltiazem. A lengthy treatment experience exists for verapamil, a compound that has progressed from an immediate-release to a sustained-release and, more recently, a delayed/sustained-release formulation designated for administration at bedtime. This latter formulation synchronizes drug delivery with the early morning rise in blood pressure, which is a particularly attractive feature when viewed in the context of the distinctive pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic features of verapamil. [source]


Beyond the Usual Strategies for Blood Pressure Reduction: Therapeutic Considerations and Combination Therapies

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL HYPERTENSION, Issue 6 2001
Thomas D. Giles MD
Rapidly accumulating clinical data have repeatedly demonstrated not only the critical importance of even small increases in blood pressure as a pathophysiologic factor in the development of cardiovascular disease, particularly in individuals with diabetes mellitus, but also the therapeutic necessity of more aggressive blood pressure reduction and the achievement of progressively lower blood pressure targets in reducing cardiovascular event rates. JNC VI has defined optimal blood pressure as ,120/80 mm Hg, and Stage 1 hypertension as ,140/80 mm Hg. Target blood pressures are now ,130/80 mm Hg in patients with diabetes and <125/75 mm Hg for patients with hypertensive renal disease with proteinuria of>1 gm/24 hours. Achieving such target pressures is increasingly difficult, particularly in diabetic patients with chronic renal disease, who require complex multidrug antihypertensive regimens. This review attempts to provide some suggestions for constructing such antihypertensive regimens, and provides considerations for the appropriate use of diuretics and the most effective drug combinations. Factors potentially contributing to drug resistant hypertension include such problems as failure to maximize drug dosing, suboptimal diuretic use, noncompliance, and possible confounding effects of such concomitant medications as nonsteroidal and anti-inflammatory drugs or decongestants. The issues underlying drug-resistant hypertension are listed, together with strategies for overcoming this problem. [source]


Rathke Cleft Cyst: Diagnostic and Therapeutic Considerations

THE LARYNGOSCOPE, Issue 10 2002
Jan L. Kasperbauer MD
Abstract Objective To highlight diagnostic and therapeutic issues about Rathke cleft cysts for otorhinolaryngologists. Study Design Retrospective. Methods We retrospectively reviewed data collected on Rathke cleft cysts between 1978 and 1998: presenting symptoms, visual acuity, surgical treatment, complications, recurrences, and effect on daily activity. Results Twenty-nine patients were diagnosed with a Rathke cleft cyst (11 male and 18 female patients; mean age, 46 y). The most common presenting symptom was head pain (55%). The majority (59%) of cases demonstrated suprasellar extension on preoperative imaging, with pituitary dysfunction identified in 66%. Recurrence occurred in eight patients (28%). Postoperative visual function improved or remained stable in all patients. Persistent pituitary dysfunction required hormonal supplementation in seven patients (24%). Only one patient with an astrocytoma in addition to a Rathke cleft cyst did not maintain the ability to perform normally on an assessment of activities of daily living, a striking contrast to patients with craniopharyngioma. Conclusions Conclusions were as follows: 1) Rathke cleft cysts must be considered as sources of head pain and pituitary dysfunction. 2) Persistent or recurrent cyst formation occurs in approximately one-third of the patients. Recurrence may take many years, and follow-up imaging is recommended for at least a decade. 3) Maintenance of the ability to perform the activities of normal daily living can be expected after surgical management. 4) Most Rathke cleft cysts can be managed through transnasal exposure of the sella. 5) Packing the sella may result in predisposition to recurrent cyst formation. [source]


The Lung Is The Major Site That Produces Nitric Oxide To Induce Acute Pulmonary Oedema In Endotoxin Shock

CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL PHARMACOLOGY AND PHYSIOLOGY, Issue 4 2001
Ru Ping Lee
SUMMARY 1. The present study was undertaken to determine the locus of nitric oxide (NO) production that is toxic to the lung and produces acute pulmonary oedema in endotoxin shock, to examine and compare the effects of changes in lung perfusate on endotoxin-induced pulmonary oedema (EPE) and to evaluate the involvement of constitutive and inducible NO synthase (cNOS and iNOS, respectively). 2. Experiments were designed to induce septic shock in anaesthetized rats with the administration of Escherichia coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Exhaled NO, lung weight (LW)/bodyweight (BW) ratio, LW gain (LWG) and lung histology were measured and observed to determine the degree of EPE 4 h following LPS. The EPE was compared between groups in which LPS had been injected either into the systemic circulation or into the isolated perfused lung. The lung perfusate was altered from whole blood to physiological saline solution (PSS) with 6% albumin to test whether different lung perfusions affected EPE. Pretreatment with various NOS inhibitors was undertaken 10 min before LPS to investigate the contribution of cNOS and iNOS to the observed effects. 3. Endotoxin caused profound systemic hypotension, but little change in pulmonary arterial pressure. The extent of EPE was not different between that induced by systemic injection and that following administration to isolated lungs preparations. Replacement of whole blood with PSS greatly attenuated (P < 0.05) EPE. In blood-perfused lungs, pretreatment with NOS inhibitors, such as N, -nitro- L -arginine methyl ester, aminoguanidine and dexamethasone, significantly prevented EPE (P < 0.05). 4. The major site of NO production through the whole blood is in the lung. The NO production mediated by the iNOS system is toxic to the endothelium in the pulmonary microvasculature. Inhalation of NO for patients with sepsis may be used with clinical caution. Therapeutic consideration of lung extracorporeal perfusion with PSS and pharmacological pretreatment with iNOS inhibitors may be warranted. [source]


Therapeutic considerations for postprandial dyslipidaemia

DIABETES OBESITY & METABOLISM, Issue 3 2001
John R. Burnett
[source]


Clinical evaluation and management of myasthenia gravis

MUSCLE AND NERVE, Issue 4 2004
John C. Keesey MD
Abstract Myasthenia gravis (MG) is a syndrome of fluctuating skeletal muscle weakness that worsens with use and improves with rest. Eye, facial, oropharyngeal, axial, and limb muscles may be involved in varying combinations and degrees of severity. Its etiology is heterogeneous, divided initially between those rare congenital myasthenic syndromes, which are genetic, and the bulk of MG, which is acquired and autoimmune. The autoimmune conditions are divided in turn between those that possess measurable serum acetylcholine receptor (AChR) antibodies and a smaller group that does not. The latter group includes those MG patients who have serum antibodies to muscle-specific tyrosine kinase (MuSK). Therapeutic considerations differ for early-onset MG, late-onset MG, and MG associated with the presence of a thymoma. Most MG patients can be treated effectively, but there is still a need for more specific immunological approaches. Muscle Nerve 29: 484,505, 2004 [source]


Palatal tremor in childhood: clinical and therapeutic considerations

DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE & CHILD NEUROLOGY, Issue 12 2006
J Campistol-Plana PhD
Palatal tremor (PT) is a rhythmic movement of the soft palate that often causes an ear click. PT can be symptomatic (SPT) or essential (EPT). The symptomatic form usually occurs in adults and the essential form mainly occurs in children. Several different treatments for EPT in children appear in the literature with variable reported efficacy. This report details four paediatric patients with EPT (three males, one female; mean age 6y 4mo [SD 6mo]; age at onset 6,7y) treated with piracetam (2-oxo-1-pyrrolidine acetamide). Piracetam was used to treat EPT because of its antimyoclonic properties. All children showed a good response to doses of 100 to 300mg/kg/day. EPT relapsed on withdrawal of piracetam and remitted on reintroduction. Piracetam's effect on EPT was sustained. It is concluded that piracetam is an effective drug for the treatment of EPT in children. [source]


The renin,angiotensin system and the long-term complications of diabetes: pathophysiological and therapeutic considerations

DIABETIC MEDICINE, Issue 8 2003
R. E. Gilbert
Abstract The relationship between the renin,angiotensin system (RAS) and the progression of diabetic renal disease has been a major focus of investigation over the past 20 years. More recently, experimental and clinical studies have also suggested that the RAS may have a pathogenetic role at other sites of micro- and macrovascular injury in diabetes. Complementing major advances into the understanding of the local, as distinct from the systemic RAS, a number of large clinical trials have examined whether blockade of the RAS might provide protection from the long-term complications of diabetes, beyond that due to blood pressure reduction alone. While some controversy remains, these studies have, in general, suggested that angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition and more recently, angiotensin receptor blockade reduce the development and progression of diabetic nephropathy, cardiovascular disease and possibly retinopathy. This review will focus on recent developments in our understanding of the tissue-based RAS and its role in end-organ injury in diabetes, the results of recent clinical trials and newer strategies for the pharmacological manipulation of the RAS. [source]


Complications during root canal irrigation , literature review and case reports

INTERNATIONAL ENDODONTIC JOURNAL, Issue 3 2000
M. Hülsmann
Abstract Literature review and case reports The literature concerning the aetiology, symptomatology and therapy of complications during root canal irrigation is reviewed. Three cases of inadvertent injection of sodium hypochlorite and hydrogen peroxide beyond the root apex are presented. Clinical symptoms are discussed, as well as preventive and therapeutic considerations. [source]


Interleukin (IL)-31 induces pro-inflammatory cytokines in human monocytes and macrophages following stimulation with staphylococcal exotoxins

ALLERGY, Issue 6 2010
S. Kasraie
To cite this article: Kasraie S, Niebuhr M, Werfel T. Interleukin (IL)-31 induces pro-inflammatory cytokines in human monocytes and macrophages following stimulation with staphylococcal exotoxins. Allergy 2010; 65: 712,721. Abstract Background:, IL-31 is a cytokine expressed by T cells following activation with cytokines or staphylococcal exotoxins. A major function of IL-31 in atopic dermatitis (AD) is the induction of pruritus in the skin via the IL-31 receptor on sensory nerve cells. However, the regulation of the IL-31 receptor and pro-inflammatory functions of IL-31 in human monocytes and monocyte-derived cells are yet to be studied in detail. Objective: To investigate the regulation and function of IL-31 receptors in resting and activated human monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells. Methods:, Human monocytes, macrophages and dendritic cells were stimulated with staphylococcal exotoxins (SEB, ,-toxin) or cytokines (IFN-,, IL-13). IL-31RA expression and regulation were then investigated at both the mRNA and the protein level. Subsequently, functional effects of IL-31 stimulation on cytokine secretion were measured at the protein level. Results:, Staphylococcal exotoxins significantly up-regulated IL-31RA expression on monocytes and macrophages but not on dendritic cells at both the mRNA and the protein level. IL-31 enhanced the secretion of IL-1,, IL-6 and IL-18 and up-regulated CD86 expression. In patients with AD, functional IL-31RA was also detected following stimulation of PBMC with IFN-,. However, this was not observed in healthy individuals. Conclusion:, IL-31 induces pro-inflammatory effects in activated human monocytes and macrophages. This may have implications for cutaneous inflammation in eczema where an over-expression of IL-31 has been described previously. Moreover, our findings provide a new link between staphylococcal colonization and the worsening of inflammation via IL-31. Further therapeutic considerations may include IL-31 as a target in AD. [source]